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Standing on the grand stairway of the Royal Palace, his hand upon the balustrade, and looking at the splen dor round him, Napoleon Bonaparte said to his borther Joseph, to whom he had given the throne of Spain, "You are better housed than I am." That was the emperor's opinion of the royal residence in Madrid. To Na poleon the conquest of this ancient and famous land of Spain was one of his greatest victories. Many people, when they first see the country around Madrid, are sur prised at the lack of trees there. It is known that the mountains of that re gion were once covered with a heavy growth of forest, which has since been cut away. The trees were felled to put money into the royal treasury. One reason they were never replanted is that many of the Castilians have a strong dislike for trees. They think only of the birds that nest among the branches and feed in grain fields they forget that trees are both useful in themselves, giving shade and mois ture and beautifying the scenery. In later years a wise government has come to see that the slight loss to farmers is not nearly so important as the effect woodlands have on cli irate. Groves now dot the landscape with patches of refreshing green, and the climate is already improving. It is hoped that the bleak country, which COMPLETE LIST OF PRIZE W1NNERSATCOUNTY FAIR (Continued from first page). G. Cronk, Early Ohio, 6th J. E. Boobar, Early Ohio 7th. Geo. VV. Day, Early Ohio 8th. Ora Whiting, Burbanks 1st. N. G. Reynolds, Burbanks 2nd Geo. Miller, Burbanks 3rd Lee Hiltz, Burbanks 4th John Noel, Burbanks, 5th D. A. Whiting, Burbanks, Gth A. Heath, Burbanks, 7th Aug. Jarchow, Burbanks 8th. Ora Whiting, Carmen, 1st Mrs. L. Myhre, Carmen 2nd Geo. Miller, Carmen, 3rd Lars O. Myhre, Carmen, 4th. John Patterson, Carmen, 5th. Chris H. Hagen, Carmen, 6th. Sunnyside Farm, Carmen, 7th Ole J. Felland, Carmen, 8th. Aug. Jarchow, Triumph, 1st. John Noel, Triumph, 2nd L. A. Gould, Triumph, 3rd Mrs. M. F. Grover, Triumph 4th Larin Coyle, Triumph, 5th Hugo Hensel. Triumph, 6th.. Jas. H. French Triumph 7th D. H. Whiting, Triumph 8th. Display of Potatoes, John Schmidt, 1st Hugo eHnsel, Triumph, 6th. other variety, 1st Hugo Hensel, Potatoes any other variety, 2nd Geo. Miller, potatoes any other variety, 3rd T. G. Haycraft, potatoes any other variety, 4th Sunnyside Farm, potatoes any other variety, 5th Aug. Jarchow, potatoes any other variety 6th SPAIN*AND GIBRALTAR "Learn aie Thing Every Day." NO. 2. ROYAL PLACE, MADRID Copyright, 1913, by The Mentor Association, Inc. 50 00 50 00 50 00 50 00 50 00 50 00 50 00 2.50 2.00 50 00 50 ,00 50 .00 2.50 2-00 1.50 1 .00 .50 5.00 1.50 3.00 2-50 2.00 1.50 1 .00 50 ADDITIONAL WANTS Too Late To Classify WANTEDA nurse girl at 520 Bel trami avenue. WANTEDTo rent a small modern home. No children. Address care of Pioneer. WANTEDCompetent girl for gen eral house work. Inquire 811 Be midji avenue. FOR SALECheap, one Minneapolis traction engine 22 horse power one 3 sow edger, one trimmer, one saw mill outfit, 2 good Atkins solid tooth saws, tools and good belting will sell cheap if taken at once. Ed. Erickson, Pequot, Minn.* Lock Box 17. W. O. Schroeder, Bemidji, Mian. I hereby nominate. now grows only a spare crop of corn, will become fertile and fruitful again when new forests have made a more regular rainfall and a steadier tem perature. Scientific forestry can prob ably redeem the error that was com mitted centuries ago. Madrid, though a modern city, has been from the beginning a center of art and literature. Velasquez went there from Seville to spend the great er part of his life. It was there that Cervantes wrote the second part of Don Quixote. More important, per haps, than any other figure in Span ish drama was Lope de Vega, a na tive of the city. He had an eventful life while writing poems and plays with wonderful readiness. According to his own statement, more than 100 to his plays were written so quickly that it took only twenty-four hours from the tjme he started to compose each one of ithem until it had been produced on the stage. He wrote 1,800 plays. He is said to have print ed 21,300,000 lines, which, if we can believe his own account, was only a part of all that he wrote. To do this he must have written nearly nine hundred lines a day all through his life. Many other artists and writers have worked in Madrid, and the Span ish capital is still a well known cen ter of culture. VEGETABLES Lee Hilts, rutabagas 1st 1.00 A. T. Wheelock, rutabagas 2nd .75 Jno. Patterson, rutabagas 3rd 50 Lee Hiltz, carrots, 1st 1.00 L. A. Gould, carrots, 2nd .75 W. T. Wheelock, carrots, 3rd. .50 Lee Hilts, beets 1st 1.00 .75 .50 ,00 ,75 ,50 ,00 Geo. Miller, beets 2nd Jno. Gilstad, beets 3rd Lee Hilts, parsnips 1st Geo. R. Wilson, parsnips 2nd Harry Carlson, parsnips, 3rd Lee Hilts, ripe cucumbers 1st Nels Willet, ripe cucumbers 2nd 75 J. H. Heath, ripe cucumbers 3rd .50 J. D. Lunn, green cucumbers, 1st i.oo John Patterson, green cucum bers 2nd 75 Nels Willet, green cucumbers, 3rd .50 L. H. Gould, cucumbers pick ling, 1st i.oo A. T. Wheelock, cucumbers pickling 2nd John Patterson, cucumbers, pickling, 3rd Mrs. Wm. Morris, peppers 1st 1 Lee Hilts, peppers 2nd L. A. Gould, peppers 3rd John Patterson, Kohl Rabi, 1st .i Ora Whiting. Kohl Rabi, 2nd L. A. Gould, salsify, 1st 1 A. P. Ritchie, salsify, 3rd 75 .50 00 ,75 .50 .00 .75 .00 .50 Class 3-2 Specimen. Nels Willet, early cabbage 1st 1 Geo. Miller, early cabbage 2nd Gus Edman, early cabbage 3rd L. A. Gould, cabbage, late flat, 1st i Gus Erdman, cabbage, late flat, 2nd W. T. Blakley, cabbage, late flat, 3rd Buck Wheelock, cabbage, late round, 1st Aug. Jarchow, cabbage, late round, 2nd W. Shelafoo, cabbage, late round, 3rd Lee Hilts, cauliflower 1st L. A. Gould, cauliflower, 2nd W. T. Blakley, muskmelon Rocky ford, 1st W. G. Reynolds, muskmelon Rockyford, 2nd. Lee Hiltz, muskmelon, Rocky ford, 3rd. .50 A. P. Ritchie, watermelon 1st 1.00 Harry Bawers watermelon 2nd .75 Geo. Miller, watermelon 3rd .50 A. P. Ritchie, citron,-1st 1.00 Lee Hiltz, citron, 2nd .75 Geo. R. Wi/lson, citron 3rd .50 John Lund, egg plant, 1st 1.00 Lee Hiltz, Kale 1st 1.00 00 75 ,50 ,00 .75 .50 1.00 .75 .50 1.00 .75 1.00 .75 ****^*****^****M Nomination Blank contestant In the Schroeder Piano Contest and ask that you place her name on yeur numbered list. .ai a ,r. Not Necessary to sign SOeOBMBBK A. P. Ritchie, Kale, 2nd, ,r^75 Class 4,-1 Specimen^Vfl^ Peter Narum, squash, green :5'x*T Hubbard 1st 1.00 Chas. Hoyt, squash green Hub bard, 2nd ,75 A. P. Ritchie, squash, green Hubbard, 3rd 50 Special (Vegetable) Peter Narum, 1st 2.0 0 Lorin Coyle, 2nd 1.00 I*.. Coyle, squash, Golden Hub bard, 1st 1,00 A. P. Ritchie, squash, Golden' Hubbard, 2nd .75 Lee Hintz, squash, Golden Hubbard, 3rd v.. 50 Lee Hiltz, squash, White Bush summer, 1st 1.00 H. Hensel, squash, White bush summer, 2nd 75 Chris- Hagen, squash, White Bush, summer 3rd 50 J. A. Heath,, squash, crook neck, 1st 00 Mrs. S. E. Wilson, squash crookneck, 2nd 75 C. F. Schroeder, squash crook neck, 3rd."." .50 Gus Erdman, squash, other va riety, 1st 1.00 J. A. Heath, squash other va riety, 2nd 75 Aug. Jarchow, squash, other variety 3rd. .50 Pete Narum, pie pumkin, 1st 1.00 Lee Hiltz, pie pumpkin, 2nd.. .75 O. Whiting, pie pumpkin, 3rd 50 L. A. Gould, pie pumpkin, long yellow 1st 1.00 L. Coyle, pie pumpkin, long yellow 3rd .50 Class 51 Bunch J. D. Lunn, celery, 1st 1.00 E. P. Rice, celery, 2nd .75 L. A. Gould, celery, 3rd 50 C. F. Schroeder, rhubarb, 1st. 1.00 L. Coyle, rhubarb, 2nd .75 L. Hiltz, endive, 1st 1.00 A. P. Ritchie, endive, 2nd .75 Class 6Onions, 10 Specimens Harry Carlson, white globe 1st 1.00 Lee Hiltz, white globe 3rd .50 John Lunn, white flat 1st 1.00 Lee Hiltz, white flat, 2nd .75 Geo. Miller, white flat 3rd .50 Hugo Hensel, red globe 1st 1.00 Nels Willet, red globe 2nd .75 Peille Marin, red globe, 3rd .50 Lee Hiltz, red flat, 1st 1.00 Geo. Miller, red flat, 2nd .75 Mrs. F. M. Grove, red flat 3rd 50 John Patterson, yellow globe, 1st, 1.00 Harry Carlson, yellow globe 2nd 75 Aug. Jarchow, yellow globe 3rd 50 A. Wilcox, yellow flat 1st 1.00 James French, yellow flat, 2nd 75 John Patterson, yellow flat, 3rd 50 Class 7Tomatoes y2 Peck. Hugo Hensel, large red 1st. 1.00 L. A- Gould, large red, 2nd... .75 Jacob Kalolski large red, 3rd .50 Mrs. Wm. Morris, small red, 1st 1.00 Lee Hiltz, small red 75 Pete Narum, small red, 50 J. Bogart, large yellow, let ..1.00 Mrs. M. F. Grover, small yel \ow, 1st 1.00 Mat Mayer, small yellow, 2nd.. .75 Lee Hiltz, small yellow, 3rd. .50 Mrs. M. F. Grover, large green, 1st 1.00 Ora Whiting, Large green 2nd 75 L. Coyle, large green,3rd 50 Division "1" FRUITS A. Hensly, Apples, any large variety, 1st 2.0 0 Aug. Jarchow, Apples, any large variety, 2nd. A. Hensel, Crab & Hybrid, 1st 1 A. Jarchow, Crab & Hybrid, 2nd Pete Narum, Crab & Hybrid, 3rd John Harris, Plum, 1.00 Mrs. T. J. Andrews, Plums.. .75 Robt. Titus, Plums, 3rd 50 R. Minto, Grapes 1st 1.00 Mrs. T. J. Andrews, Grapes 2nd .75 Pete Narum, Grapes .50 Pete Narum, Cherries, 1st... 1.00 M. Madson Cherries, 2ri. d... (Continued tomorrow) 50 00 ,75 50 .75 SAYS MULHALL'S STORY IS FALSE Former Congressman Cole of Ohio OR the Stand. Washington, Sept. 16.Former Rep* resentative Ralph D. Cole of the Eighth Ohio district told the house lobby committtee that Martin M. Mul hall's testimony and correspondence regarding his conduct as a member of the house were so full of half truths and falsa statements that he would confine his own testimony to a general denial. He denied flatly that Mulhall helped him get his nomination to con gress. "I never received a contribution from the National Association ot Manufacturers," said Cole. "Mulhall once came to my office and started to tell me I had to stop my fight on Speaker Cannon. He never got any further than that I ordered Mulhall out of the room and I told him if he ever returned I'd. throw him out of the window. "From that day to this I've nevei seen Mulhall. That is the way I've served the National Association of Manufacturers. It's the first time and the last time I ever talked with any one from that organization about leg iSlatton." 1T.* O ,?~'"''U -SiTSK 're*-* *5*|+* TD mmui Hint mmaak BEQUEATH8 9318,000 TO YALE. ,.U Jersey City, N. J., Sept. 16. 'The trustees of the estate of Mrs. Ella J. McPherson, wid ow of John R. McPherson, who was United States senator from New Jersey for many years, have finished their work and have turned into the treas ury of Yale university 8218,- 000 In securities and deeds to property estimated to be worth at least,$100,000, 4 4 4* 4 4* 4- 4. REVIVES-:, ROOSEVELT IDEA Agricultural Department Would Bet ter Live* of Farm Women. Washington, Sept. 16.The Wilson administration has revived the idea of the Roosevelt administration to bet ter the condition of the farm woman. Secretary Houston of the agricul- Dr. Evans, Ex-Commissioner of Health, ays: "There is almost no relation be tween skin diseases and the blood." The akin must be cured through the skin. The germs must be washed out, and so salves have long ago been found worth less. The most advanced physicians of this country are now agreed on this, and are prescribing a wash of wlntergreen, thymol and other ingredients for eczema and all other skin diseases. This com pound is known as D.D.D. Prescription for Eczema. 'i 1.. 2 best in 3 heats. Doctors Use This for Eczema z*j T^^^S tural department announced that within the next few days 50,000 let ters would be addressed to the wom en members of farm households throughout the United States re questing them to give him informa tion as to how the department of agri culture can best serve the needs of the farm women. The letter will go to about twenty leading farms In each of the 2,800 counties of the United States. The answers are expected'i' totf*2.i7",'' the views and opinions of upwards of a half million farm :irmm:women. '"::*T' EMERGENCY BILL IS PASSED Measure Provides $100,000 to Bring Americana Out of Mexico. Washington, Sept. 16.Waiving any reference to committee on the ground that it Was an emergency measure the senate passed the house resolution appropriating 9100,000 to meet the ex penses of bringing destitute Ameri cans out of Mexico. Dr. Holmes, the well known akin' spe cialist writes: "I am convinced that the D.D.D. Prescription is as much a specific for eczema as quinine for malaria. I have been prescribing the D.D.D. remedy for years." It will take away the itch the instant you apply it. In fact, we are so sure of what D.D.D. will do for you that we will be glad to let you have a $1 bottle on our guar antee that it will cost you nothing un less you find that it does the work, BARKER'S DRUG STORE 217-3rd gt. Votin Power and ion In the Schroeder=Pioneer Free Piano Contest DAILY Votes Price Three Months Subscription 3,000 $1.00 Six Months Subscription..... 6,000 2.00 One Year Subscription... ...12,000 4.00 WEEKLY One Year Subscription.... 5,000 $1.50 Two Years Subscription .10,000 3.00 Three Years Subscription 15,000 4.50 MERCHANDISE BOUGHT AT SCHROEDER'S One Dollar's Worth 100 $1.00 Five Dollars' Worth 500 5.00 If you have a friend who wants to win that piano, find but her number and cast your votes for her. See to it that you get votes and receipts withi your payments for merchandise and subscriptions. HELP DECIDE THE WINNER i^..^^ r--'?PrTiri4-^ SPSf represent &*U Re Lake Reservation, Sept. 18,19, 20 3 Days of Fun, Frolic and Instruction. Music by Chippewa Indian Band of White Earth, Minnesota ram First Day Thursday, Sept. 18 Grand Parade by Indians in Full War Regalia. Base Ball GameCross Lake vs. Red Lake. Judging Exhibits by Committee. Tug of WarLittle Rock vs. Agency. Indian War Dance, Afternoon and Evening. Program Second Day Friday, Sept 19 Bemidji Day, Special Train Leaves 9:45 A. M., Returning Same Evening Grand Parade by Indians in Native Costume. Base Ball GameCross Lake vs. Red Lake. La Crosse Game by Chippewa Indians. Foot Race, 100 Yard Dash. Foot Race, 220 Yard Dash. Standing High Jump. Running high Jump. Tepee Raising Contest. Potato Race. Sack Race. Old Man's Foot Race. Climbing Greased Pole. Judging Exhibits by Committee. Canoe Race at Jourdam Lake. Moccasin Game, Red Lake vs. Visiting Indians. Indian War and Squaw Dances. i 4- Program Third Day Saturday, Sept 20 Grand Parade by Indians in Native Costumes Base Ball jGame, Cross Lake vs. Red Lake or winner of first two games vs. Picked Team: Tug of War, winner of first contest vs. Cross Lake Team. La Crosse Game, Cross Lake vs. Red Lake Indians. Pah-pah-se-kah-way-win Game by Old Indian Women. Horse Race, half mile, 2 best in 3 heats. Pony Race, quarter mile, 2 best in 3 heats. Ox Race, 250 yards.. Moccasin Game., Indian Dances. Come and see the progress made by the Red Lake Indians in farming and stock raising, and witness the unique and picturesque games and amusements of the Indians. A grand, glorious and good time assured to each and all. Remember the Dates and Don't Miss the Fun s-.j. DR. PIERCE'S TtmSBAY, SfePTEMBEB 16, 1913. A Perfect Woman Nobly Planned To Warn, to Comfort and Command" Nature never intended woman to be delicate, ailing, or a sufferer from"^f "nerves.** Women in middle age complain of "hot flashes." Many women suffer needlessly from girlhood to womanhood, and from moth- 1 erhood to middle life,with backache, or headache, dizziness, faintness, or bearing-down sensations. Fora permanent relief from these distressing symptoms nothing is so good as FAVORITE PRESCRIPTION as a soothing and strengthening ner vineallaysand subduesnervousexcitability, irritability, nervous exhaustion, and other distressing symptoms- commonly attendant upon functional and organic diseases of the feminineorgans. It inducesrefreshing sleep' andrelievesmentalanxietyand^despondency.0*** PiV^,.f.TUa at 5** HP The "Favorite Prescription'' known everywhere and for over 40 years as the standard remedy for the diseases of i .Women. Your dealer in medicines sells it in liquid or tablet form oryou cart send 50 one i cent stamps for a trial box of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription tablets Address Dr. Pierce, Invalids' Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y. vefolat and Invigorat.e stomach, liver and bowels. SofaMoated, tiny granulea. GOTO BATCHELDER'S POR GOOr GROCERIES AND GENERAL MERCHANDISE FRESH EG.QS AND BUTTER IP. BATCHELDER 117 Minnesota Ave. Phone 180 Automobile Accessories and Supplies Big stock of tires, all sizes. If it is some- thing for the automobile or gas engine, we can supply your wants and our prices are positively right. We Handle the Following Lines of Gars: Ford. Studebaker, Over land and Cadillac 1014 models ready for delivery. We have some used cars for sale, cheap. Northern Automobile _- Bow and Arrow Contest. Pony Race, quarter mile, 4- Wjl 4 -V-*H A