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The Tpmahawk.
WHITE EARTH, MINK
All the News of the Past Seven
Days Condensed.
HOME AND FOREIGN ITEMS
News of the Industrial Field, Personal
and Political Items, Happenings
at Home anil Abroad.
THE NEWS FROM ALL THE WORLD
DOMESTI C.
The three children of Ora Kdcling
ton and William Dudley were
drowned in the flood at Clinton, In d.
John Taylor was hanged at Kan
sas City, !Mo., for the murder on
March 2, 1901, of Ruth Nollard, his
former sweetheart.
Elliott Lyons who, on February 6,
shot and killed Sheriff W. W. With
ers, was hanged at Eugene, Ore.
Charles May, who shot and killed
Robert Martin on December 15, 1900,
at a country dance, was hanged at
St. Joseph, Mo.
The exchanges at theleatlingelearing
houses in the United States- during the
.seien days end ed on the 17th aggre
gated $113,725,007. The decrease co m
pared wi-th the corresponding week of
Ja&t year was 18.4.
A crop review shows that April
weather thus far is ideal for growth
but unfavorable to farm work.
There were 160 busine^ failures in
the United States during the seven
days ended on the 17th, against 153 the
fame week in^902.
Dr. James L. Gartrell. 68 years old,
once a member of the Texas legisla
ture and probate judge, was hanged
in liutler, Mo., for the murder of D.
B. Donegan in March, 1901.
Gov. Durbin, of Indiana, has ordered
the Hammond police to stop pool sell
ing at the Lakeside race track at Rob}.
Gunners of the battle ship Alabama
are the champion marksmen of tin
American navy.
The will of Mrs. Fannie S. Wilder,
eonveyiitg%$4,000,000
to local charities,
has been filed at St. Paul.
President Roosevelt left Fort Yel
lowstone for Norris geycrs.
Lieut. Gov. John A. Lee. of Mis
souri, is missing and is accused by
St. Louis officials with distributing
$27,000 in baking powder trust boodle
among state legislators.
Weekly trade reviews say business
has been retarded by cold, wet,
weather of last few days.
The house in Washington given to
Gen. Ph il Sheridan has been sold
Mr s. Sheridan, who is said to haw
needed the money.
The People's Hank and Trust com
pany, of Fort Payne, Ala., Inning
branches at Attala and Collins\illt\
Ala., has suspended.
The percentages of the baseball
clubs in the National league for the
week ended on the 19th were: Pitts
burg, 1.000 Chicago. .500 Roston,
.500 Brooklyn. .500 New York. .500
Philadelphia! .500 St. Louis .500 Cin
cinnati, .000.
For the iirst time in the history of
the government the imports ha\e ex
ceeded a billion dollars in a*, ear.
Rev. Dr. Francis A. Horton. pastor
of the Temple Ptesbj terinn church in
Philadelphia, was stricken with apo
plexy in the pulpit and died.
John Victor, his wife, and Maggie
Fuet/., Mrs. Victor's sister, were
drowned near Kalkaska. Mich., by the
capsizing of a boat.
Seven members of the last Missouri
legislature were indicted in St. Louis
for bribery.
Immigration returns for April
break all records, 64,000 aliens ha\ing
arri\ed in 18 days.
Cracksmen wrecked the safe of the
Allen state bank at Allen, Kan., and
escaped with $2,700.
At Fort Wayne Harry C. Kline, a
grocer, fatally shot 13-year-old Li/./.ie
Jackson, with whom he A\as infatu
ated, and then killed himself.
John II. Molesworth, of Chicago, shot
Mr s. Bridget Maker and Killed himself
at Houghton, Mich.
George J. Jordan killed his wife and
son and himself in New York.
James McKinney. an outlaw, and
Deputy Sheriff Tibbelts were killed
in a battle at Rakersfield. Cal., and
Constable Packard. was fat all
wounded.
Mr s. Carrie Nation has opened her
home at Topeka, Kan., to wi\es of
destitute drunkards.
Every window glass factory in In
diana has closed, 20,000 skilled work
men being thrown out of employ
ment for an indefinite period.
The armored cruiser West Virginia
was launched at Newport News. Mis'*
Catherine White, daughter of the
governor, acting as sponsor.
The war department has arranged
to buy lid acres more land at Fort
Sheridan, 111.
Henry Herman, a Milwaukee con
tractor, is said to be involved $600,000
through funds borrowed to carry out
a rious sch s.
Judge Carlock, of the court of first
instance, died at Cebu. Philippines, of
cholera. was a native of Illinois.
Patriots' day, the anniversary of the
battle of Lexington, was celebrated in
Massachusetts.
The immense packing house of the
Pacific Meat company was destroyed
by fire at Tacoma, Wash., the loss be
ing over $200,000.
i^iSe
lt!UJ -ff
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Thousands of acres of land are n
er water near Vincennes, Ind., and for
the third time this jear many people
ha\e been forced to move away fr om
the lowlands.
Twen-H thousand acres of central Il
linois coal fields ha\e been bought by
J. J. Hill's ndicate, capitaliz ed at $80,-
000,000.
Lou H. Winsor, of Reed Cit Mich
has succeeded the late S. Conover as
secretary of the Michigan Grand lodge
of Masons.
Thirt j-thousand miners were locked
out by the Reading, Lehigh and Sus
quehanna companies because of refusal
to work over eight hours on Saturday s.
An east bound Erie railroad Chicago
"limited" -train was wrecked by col
lision with a freight train at Re'!
House, N. Y., and eight persons were
kulied and ten* injured.
I is said that the president before
going on .his -trip ordered that naval of
ficers must stop talking of possible
war with Germanj.
At Butte, Mont., President Roosevelt
will be the guest of the Uni on Labor
union on Maj
27.
The engineer, fireman and three pos
tal clerks were killed in a railway
wreck near K\e'rtion, Mo.
A tornado nearly destroyed White
Sorings, Mo., a summer resort.
Fire destroyed the Park department
store and o-ther business plac es in- a
Crosse, Wis., the loss being $500,000.
Bri g. (Jens. Louta Rucker ami
Theodore A. Baldwin, recently pro
moted, have been placed on the retired
lis't of the armj.
Seven children of a family named
O'Mara, Ihing near Hartford, Kan
have died of black diphtheria.
The Thirtj-third Minnesota legisla
ture adjourned sine die after pacing
some 300 new laws.
Prof. Charles R. Van Ilise has been
tendered the presidency of the Uni
versity of Wisconsin.
There are 100 cases of typhoid fe\er
at Stanford university in Palo Alt o,
Cal.
The government's weekly crop re
port shows low temperature and un
favorable weather for farm work east
of the Rocky mountains, corn plant
ing delayed nnd wheat uninjured.
Senator ITan na in an address at
Columbus declared D. M. Parry's
attacks on union labor shows the lat
ter is misinformed and commended
the workingnien's attitude toward ar
bitration.
The steamship Kaiser Wilhelm TT.
706J^ feet long, reached New Vork on
its maiden voyage.
Andrew Rainey, a negro charged
with theft, was beaten to death by
a mob at Bainbridge, Ga.
Grover Cleveland was accused by
W. J. Bryan, in a speech to Kansas
City democrats, with betraying fris
party and "disgracing" himself by
aiding republicans.
The Massachusetts senate kitten" a
resolution favoring the election of
United States senators by popular
vote.
The United States cruisers New
York, Boston and Marblehead ar
rived at San Diego, Cal.
Advices received at the white house
from Secretary Loeb indicate that
President Roosevelt is enjoying his
sojourn in the Yellowstone park.
PEnSONAl AM POLITICAL.
Mrs. Robert Fit/Simmons, the pugi
list's wife, died at Bonsonlmrst, N.
Y of pneumonia.
Former Congressman A. S. McClure
died suddenly from heart disease at
Wooster, O.. aged G4 years.
Pierpont Morgan celebrated his
sixty-sixth birthday at his home in
New York.
Jesse G. Haw ley, proprietor of the
Reading Fagle, of which he was one of
the founders in IStiS, died in Reading,
Pa., aed 03 ears.
Rev. Edward Drinkhouse, 73
ears old, for IS vears editor of the
Methodist Protestant, died at is
home in Baltimore.
Mr s. Honora McCarthy, of South
Shaftsbury, Vt., who claims to be the
oldest woman in New England, cele
brated er ne hundred and thirteenth
birthday.
Municipal elections held throughout
Illinois were confined chieflj to local
issues and did not show* an sweeping
changes.
Stephen Mallory has been elect
ed for another term in the United
States senate by the Florida legisla
ture.
Jonas Livermore celebrated at Black
wood. N. J., the one hundred and first
annhersary of his birth.
FOREIGN.
Shamrock TIL. Sir Thomas Lipton's
new challenger for the America's cup.
was dismantled during a squall off
We,-, mouth. England, and Sir Thomas
was -lightlj hurt and ne man
drowned.
M. Emeandri. a Paris aeronaut
with three truests. traveled 450 mil es
by balloon, from Paris to Aries, in
15 hours.
Sir Oliver Mowat. lieutenant gover
nor of Ontario, died in Ottawa, aged
&3 3*ears.
A terrific hurricane struck Berlin
and many persons were injured and
the damage to property was great.
Minister Conger reports from Pe
king the suppression of an attempt
to reorganize the Boxer movemeut
in the distri ct of Yutien.
The army in the Philippines is *o
be reduced to 15,000.
The famine in Kwang Si province,
China, is killi ng tens of thousands of
persons, and women are selling them
selves into slavery to escape starva
tion.
The Boer war added 165.000.000 to
the British national debt.
Dr. S. T. Williams, an American Bap
tist missionary, died at Canton. China.
Sanio Domingo residences were dam
aged in a bombardment by govern
ment troops and Gen s. Quesada, Alva
rez and Cordsro were killed.
**^^5v
The Indian institute at Brant ford,
Ont., Mas destroyed b*. fire.
The German press regrets its attack
on the Washington government for
sending the American European na*.al
squadron to Marseill es togret-t Presi
dent Lou bet of France.
A storm swept middle Europe and did
an immense amount of damage. Twen
ty-one persons were injured in Berli n.
The snow is three feet deep through
out the country.
French government has begun meas
ures for expulsion of religious orders
refused authorization and still remain
ing in the country.
The two thousand six hundred and
fiftj-sixth anniversarj* of the founda
tion of Rome was celebrated.
Both Shamrock III. and Shamrock
will be sent to America by Sir
Thomas Lipton.
Thirty-nine soldiers were killed in
a clash between Turks and insur
gents near Salonica.
William Mortimer Clark, of Toron-
o, has been appointed lieutenant
governor of the province of Ontario.
LATER.
The Union Traction company, the
North Chicago street railway company
and West Chicago btrect railway com
pany have been placed in che hands of
receivers.
On account of poor health, Miss Mary
A. Smith, of Buffalo, Minn., committed
suicide by hanging.
ALEXANDER RAMSEY DEAD,.
The First Governor of Minnesota Passes
Aivy at a Ripe Old Age, Sur
rounded by Friends and
Family.
St. Paul, April 23.Alexander Ram
sey, aged 89, pioneer and first governor
of the territory of Minnesota, died at
his residence, -65 Exchange street, St.
Paul, shortly aft er 0 o'clock last even
ing.
His death, while not wholly unfor
seen, in view* of his extreme age, and
his illness since February last, was un
expected, and will come as a shock to
the large number of friends whom he
had gathered about him in this city, as
well as to the people of Minnesota, to
whom he was known during a long
and honorable public career.
Alexander Ramsey was born in Har
risburg, Pa., Sept. 8. 1815.
His father was of Scotch desent, his
mother came fr om a German family
who settled in Pennsylvania early in
the Eighteenth century, From his
parents he inherited a stronir constitu
tion and also a taste for study.
was appointed territorial govern
or of Minnesota by President Taylor.
This was in 1849. Mr. Ramsey left at
once for St. Paul arriving there May
17, 1849, and four days later after the
arrival of the other territorial officers
he issued a proclamation declaring the
territory duly organized.
I the dining room of a small hotel
on the banks of the Mississippi river
the new governor read his first me s
sage to a joint meeting of the mem
bers of booh houses, twenty-seven in
all.
Ln 1853 is term of office ended and
1855 was elected mayor of St. Paul.
I 1858. when Minnesota was admitted
to the union, Mr. ilams ey was nomi
nated for governor by the republican
party, but was not elected. Two years
later he was again nominated and this
time elected.
Sept. 10, 1845, Gov. Ramsey was mar
ried to Miss Anna Earl Jenks, daugh
ter of Judjre Jenks of Pennsylvania.
MINOR NEWS ITENS.
Bank deposits have increased 85 per
cent, in ten -.ears.
I is understood that Sir Thomas
Lipton is to race for a peerage as well
as the Amt-riean cup.
Dr. L. Gideon Archambault, late of
Providence. K. 1., lett $40,000 to iound
a home for the aged poor.
Andr ew Carnegie and others are
paid to have promised rich endowments
for a univeisity in Pittsburg.
Mayor Tom L. Johnson, of Cleve
land, says he will not.accept the demo
cratic nomination for governor of
Ohio.
John K. Lincoln, a distant relative of
Abraham Lincoln, died at the home of
his son-in-law in KansasCit3', Mo., aged
82 -.ears.
Dr. Lapponi declares that the pope
is an excellent patient, obsei*ving with
promptitude the prescriptions submit
ted to him.
The king of Siam is reported as say
ing that he knows full well that is
kingdom will some day be gobbled by
the English or the French.
Thirty-three acres of land near Indi
ana Harbor, Ind.. have been bought by
the Illinois Steel company as a site
for $1,500,000 cement works.
American methods and morality are
severely criticised in reports of the
British labor delegates recently re
turned to London from the United
States.
The post office of New York city has
32 stations and 159 substations. In it
is handled daily 450 tons of mail mat
ter. Fourteen stamp-canceling ma
chines each handle 28,000 letters an
hour.
Indictments against Rear Admiral
Stirling. Capt. Lowndes, Lieut. Smith,
Capt. Crabbe. of the army, and others,
are said to have been voted by a Forto
Rico grand jury for alleged" smug
gling.
The advance guard of Dow ie's inva
sion is quartered in a boarding-house
in New York city. They say they come
to secure lodgings for 4.000 mission
aries who are to come from Chicago in
October.
Miss Amelia Higginson, president of
the old maids' convention of New
York, condemned President Roosevelt
for his words on "race suicide" and ad
vised him to leave the baby question
to the women of this country.
s5 aSfcXak^a ^5&ttwaai6afl
ROUND ABOUT THE STATE.
A movement is on foot which will
result in the forming of a telephone
company backed by Madelia capital.
The olde st son of John Clark, Jr.,
aged 5 years, was burned to death
at Barnesvil le while the mother was
away.
A big shipment of trout fry has
just been received from the state
hatchery for the streams of Winona
county.
Articles of incorporation were filed
with the secretary of state yesterday
by the Chatfield Canning* Company of
Chatfield.
The edict has gone forth that the
slot machines in the Crookston sa
loons must go, and a good many of
them have gone.
Thomas Brannigan, aged about 60
years, was found dead in his bed last
night,, in his room at the Wilber
hous e, Minneapolis.
Burglars entered C. C. Bennett's
fur store at Minneapolis and stole
fifty-three sealskins and four otter
skin s, valu ed at $2,300.
I is believed that 11-year-old Be r
nice Grippen, who has been missing
from Little Falls, was kidnapped by
a gang of Assyrian peddlers.
John Ecklund, 76 years old, living
with A. Gustafson, St. Paul, fe^ back
wards while going upstairs and died
at the city hospital from his injuries.
The Red Wing Hat factory com
pany has decided to increase its capi
tal stock by $25,000, of which citizens
have been asked to subscribe $5,000.
E Gordon, a lumberjack, was
found dead by the side of the road
leading from Bagley to Eddy, having
shot himself to escape an attack of
tremens.
Red Wing will have a large candy
factory. Capital stock has been sub
scribed to the amount, of $50,000 and
articl es of incorporation will be filed
at once.
The American Underwriting com
pany of Boston has made formal pro
posal to remove the plant of the Na
tion al Flax Fiber company to Pipe
stone.
Fi ve horses were stolen from the
stable of Joseph Berard, about five
miles west of Pembina. Not long since
Mrs. Carey of Northcote had two
horses stolen.
Michael Murphy, who served more
terms in tne Minneapolis workhouse
than any other man of his age in the
city, died at that institution of de
lirium tremens.
State Treasurer Block received in
trust yesterday $1,517.93, under the
act passed by the present legislature
providing for the disposition of un
claimed dividends.
Knut Rasmussen of Comos, Minn.,
was found dead in bed in a room at
the Warwick hotel, Minneapolis. The
gas jet was turned on, and death was
due to asphyxiation.
The opening of navigation has
caus ed a heavy decline in the price
of bituminous coal at the Head of
the Lakes. The reduction amounts to
about $1.50 a ton.
B. Riverman, a farmer livi ng in
New Munich has been arrested charg
ed with using cancell ed postage
stamps. gave bail to appear be
fore the federal jury.
A week ago noti ce was given the re
tail saloons in Moorhead that the
practice of delivering liquor in Fargo
to parties telephoning for the same
and accepting the money on the de
livery of the goods would no longer
be permitted by the authorities and
that any repetitions of the offense
would be sufficient grounds for prose
cutions under evidence now in the
hands of the officers.
A a public meeting the citizens of
Red Lake Falls decided to grant a
thirty-year franchise to the company
mainkg the most advantageous pro
position for waterworks system. Mo
dern waterworks and sewerage sys
tem will be installed this season.
Ada is about to enter upon a build
ing and industrial boom. The com
mittee appointed to solicit subscrip
tions for stock in a creamery com
pany has reported complete success.
A proposition for the establishment
of a woolen mill is also under consi
deration.
The Fillmore County Bookkeepers
association will hold its spring meet
ing in the courthouse in Preston on
April 29 and 30. A feature will be
a lecture on "'The Busy Bee," by
JJ". E France, Platteville, Wis.
John Haye*s, aged 67 years, and for
some time an inmate of the Soldiers'
home at Minnehaha park, died as the
result of terrible burns received in a
boil er explosion at the Minneapolis
Desk factory.
Jacob Kruck. an Idaho miner, filed
suit for $40,000 damages in St. Paul
against the Gold Hunter Mining com
pany. alleges he was badly in
jured in ne of the company's mines
in Idaho.
Rural free delivery of mail from
Prior Lake postoffice was instituted
April 1 with two carriers and deli
very was also started fr om Shakopee,
Jordan and New Prague on the same
day.
Gov. Van Sant appointed the fol
lowing as boiler inspectors under the
new law: Fifty-fifth senatorial dis
trict, V. Bergstrom: seventeenth
district, ii. BladholmNint district,
Ephraim -ohnson: Twentieth dis
trict, D. SeveranceThirty-secon
district, A. M. Hawkinsondistric in
Stearns county, L. Spaulding.
The ordeal of securing a marriage
license was su ch a strain that Miss
Celia Janson. who had accompanied
her betrothed, uscar Moe, to the
courthouse in Minneapolis, where the
papers were issued, fainted after the
preliminaries had been arranged.
The Faribault Gas and Electric
companv filed articles of incorpora
tion. The capital stock is $250,000.
The amount of second-class mat
ter passing through the Minneapolis
postoffice during the first quarter in
1903 was 2.842,432 pounds, as against
2,585.913 pounds for the same period
last year. I revenue it represents
an increase of $2,625.19.
Godfrey Endres. a cigarmakT, his
wife and two children, of Faribault,
ate some lumberger cheese for break
fast and were taken violent ly ill im
mediately after. The prompt help of
a physician was all that saved their
li**cs.
feS^sB-tw^tj^s^Ma^r *%i\-s.**vil-'.-**Sa**'A* --V 3ii-2-'*'*r*~?r
THE LEGISLATURE.
The Thirty-third Session of Lawmaker!
Closes with the Usual Hurrah and
Confusiou.
St. Paul. Apill 21.Extreme conserva
tism chaiactenzed the thirty-third ses
sion of the legislature which came to a
close last night, and while over 350 bills
became laws, the net results of the ses
sion have not been great.
The cost of the session was $170,000,
and the total number of bills considered
by the two houses was 1,407, of which 915
were introduced into the house and 582
into the senate.
Of this record-breaking number over
350 have either been signed or will soon
be signed by the chief executive of the
state. Of these new laws few have any
more than a local importance.
Yesterday will be remembered by the
senators and repiesentatives as the busi
est day of the session. Both houses were
in session morning, afternoon and even
ing, with short recesses for luncheon at
noon and dinner at 6. Each house had
a large general order list and a fair-sized
calendar and many committee reports
were submitted. A good many of the
measures were impoitant and were killed
or passed after long discussions.
As bills began to accumulate in the
morning session the house and senate
each adopted a resolution allowing each
member to call up a local bill in -which
he was particularly interested and move
the passage of the measure under suspen
sion of the rules. More bills were dis
posed of in this way than were passed
under suspension of the rules during the
preceding days of the session. Later a
resolution was adopted by the house pro
viding that a collection of forty bills,
geneially agreed upon, should have the
right of way.
While the houses were at work con
ference committees were intermittently
in session during the entire day. Five
different committees met and considered
the disagreement over the tax amend
ment, without avail. A conference com
mittee considering the senate amendment
to the inheritance tax law, increasing the
exemption from $1,000 to $10,000, like
wise failed to agree.
Most of the important bills, with the
exception of the tax amendment and the
inheritance tax law, were disposed of at
11 o'clock at night. Then it was that
the senators and leprescntatives aban
doned their usual dignified mien. Some
lay back in their chairs and threw paper
wads at their neighbors. Others tore up
their "journals" and "bills" and hurled
them at a speaker who was laboiiously
working for the passage of a "local bill."
Among the important bills passed by
the senate were Representative L. C.
Stevenson's measure creating a state
board of osteopathic examiners Repre
sentative J. R. Morley's bill establishing
a state live stock sanitary board S. A.
Nelson's measure imposing a tax on
freight line companies J. Eudd's
measure providing for a bounty of 10
cents for dead crows Representative T.
T. Ofsthun's bill prohibiting the use of
trading stamps Senator Henry Morgan's
measure creating a state bureau of child
and animal protection Representative
Frank Clague's increasing the state aid
for graded, semi-graded and rural
schools.
Several important bills were killed.
Among them are Senator George P. Wil
son's bills facilitating state prosecutions
against conspiracies in restraint of trade
Representative J. A. Shephard's bill re
quiring strawberries, blueberries, rasp
berries and blackberires to be sold in
boxes of uniform 'size Representative E.
W. Stark's bill creating a new judicial
district to have jurisdiction over Chisago,
Pine and Kanabec counties George E.
Perley's measure removing the university
and normal schools from the board of
control.
Among the bills that died in senate
committees or in general orders are Rep
resentative J. O. Haugland's bill provid
ing for an ad valorem tax on public serv
ice corporations Senator George P. Wil
son's measure creating a state board of
charities and corrections Representative
A. L. Walker's bill requiring logs to be
taxed in the counties where they were cut
and Senator L. O. Thorpe's bill prohibit
ing corporations to combine in restraint
of tiade.
The house yesterday threw down the
bars that had been closed so assiduously
for ten days and suspended the rules
often enough to pass a large number of
bills. Most of them were senate riles, be
cause there was little hope for house flies
that passed the house Saturday. The
frivolity that made its appeal ance several
days ago was kept pretty well in contiol
until a late houi.
The principal features of the day in the
house was the passage of the tiadmg
stamp bill and the deadlock between the
senate and house over the tax amend
ments to the constitution. The new game
and fish code was called up and passed
by the house and sent back to the senate
for its concurrence in the house amend
ments.
The day was more remarkable for the
bills that failed than for those that got
through. Among the moie* important bills
that failed in the house were the follow
ing:
G. W. Morley's bill providing for civil
service for the dairy and food department.
The senate good roads bill, providing
for a state highway commissioner.
The serate bill creating an immigration
board.
J. F. Rosenwald's maximum grain
freight bill,
A large crowd, including many women,
crowded the house chamber at the night
session, though the proceedings were not
marked with more than the usual amount
of pyrotechnics. The house set its teeth
and plunged into the work ahead of it
silently. The program laid out by the
steering committee provide to be a good,
solid day's work, and there was little
chance for those who had hoped to take
up less favored measures.
The senate, just before adjournment,
reconsidered the vote by which it killed
Representative A. L. HelHwell's inheri
tance tax law and passed the bill with
the original senate amendment fixing the
exemption at $10,000. The exemption in
the bill which was killed was placed at
$5,000.
The senate refused to suspend the
rules and pass Representative W. A. Hin
ton's bill prohibiting the sale of kero
sene of greater density than 46 degrees
Beaume at 60 degrees Fahrenheit.
The state university and normal schools
will not be removed from the jurisdiction
of the state board of control during the
next two ears.
The senate passed, under suspension of
the rules, the house judicial commit
to's bill regulating the speed of automo
biles.
Fiee text books for independent school
districts, if the voters want them, are
provided in a bill passed bv the house.
The bill is by Senator A. Ferris, of
Brainerd. and it piovides for the sub
mission of the proposition to the voters
for their approval.
The house passed a bill by Senator
H. Peterson designed to give shippers of
farm products ample time in which to
load them. It prov ides that cars must be
left long enough to give the shippers
thirtv-six hours in which to load their
freight.
The senate killed Representative
George R. Smith's bill allowing state
banks to do a savings bank busine&s.
Senator Frank E. Putnam, of Blue Earth,
argued against the bill.
MINNESOTA BRIEFS.
Preparations for what is said will
be the grandest and most imposing
Memorial day demonstration that was
ever held in this city are rapidly
nearing completion at the hands of
the various G. A. K- committees and
the complete program will be an
nounced soon.
The charter membership roll of the
Xorthfield Commercial club is full,
as the limitation of 100 has been
reached. Hereafter applications must
be filed and members voted upon.
Mrs. E. B. Bradshaw, of
Guthrie, Okla., cured of a severe
case by Lydia E. Pmkham's
Vegetable Compound.
A great many women suffer 'with a
form of indigestion or dyspepsia which
does not seem to yield to ordinary
medical treatment. While the symp
toms seem to be similar to those of
ordinary indigestion, yet the medi
cines universally prescribed do not
seem to restore the patient's normal
condition.
Mrs. Pinkham claims that there,
is a kind of dyspepsia that is caused,
by derangement of the female organ
ism, and which, while it causes^ dis
turbance similar to ordinary indiges
tion, cannot be relieved without a
medicine which not only acts as a
stomach tonic, but has peculiar uterine
tonic effects as well.
Thousands of testimonial let
ters prove beyond question that
nothing will relieve this distress
ing condition so surely as I-ydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com
pound. It always works in har
mony with the female system.
Mrs. Pinkham advises sick
women free. Address Lynn, Mass.
ABSOLUTE
SECURITY.
Genuine
Carter's
Little LiverPills.
Must Bear Signature of
See Facsimile Wrapper Below.
Yidrjr snail anA a* easy
to take as raga*.
FOR HEADACHE,
CARTERS
IWh
osmmni MUTMAV MCWATUWC
J-ISte 1 Purely Vegetable
CURE SICK HEADACHE.
WE
WAMT YOUR TRADE
You can buy of us at whole
sale prices and save money.
Our 1,000-page catalogue tells
the story. We will send it upon
receipt of 15 cents. Your neighbors
trade with us why not you
CHICAGO
The house that tells the truth.
LWYER'S
PommelDBRANRXELSIO
_J
w* i i 'I'niwi
DYSPEPSIA OF WOMEN.
FOR DIZZINESS.
FOR BILIOUSNESS.
FOR TORPID LIVER.
FOR CONSTIPATION.
FOR SALLOW SKIN.
FOR THE COMPLEXION
Keep the rWer perfectly flry. No
water can leak in on the saddle,
cut extra wide and long In the
ekirt. F.ttra protection at shoul
der seams. Wof runted wa.
terproof. If your/ca'
dealer docsn y^Vs
have them write /i...
for catalogue to fdi{RE1
LH. H. SAWYER
ts 90S, 8oleMrra."-^gtra\
Eait Cambridge, Xau.
FREE TO WOMEN
To prove the healing and
cleansing pov er of Paxtine
Toilet Antiseptic -we-will
mail a largo trial package
with hook of instructions
absolutely free. This is
not a tiny sample, hot a large
package, enough to convince
anyone of-its valne. "Women
all over the country are
rraisin PaxtJne for what it
has done in local treat
ment of female Ills, oar
ing all inflammation and discharges, "wonderful
as & cleansing vaginal douche, for sore throat,
nasal catarrh, as a month wash, and to remove
tarta* and whiten the teeth. Send to-day &
postal card will do.
Sola by drnnliti or went postpaid by tt, 5
cent*, lam box. Satisfaction a-narnnteed.
TILE M. PJLX.TOX CO., SOI CMambaiAVq
BsttoB. Haa.
UAllEflBATIIIf* medicines, fresh and
"the U. S FRE SAMPLE
olSS-pace
nr
iW'v. Headach.
Mm Tablet* valuable Medica
l,icer laoiew.EOur.-,,
Wantod i g"JJ,sEY BR0S
"Wabaab. Ave., Chicago^
Onldc acnt free. _.
CO.. (Estab'd 135a) 8"
(IITEIt-A Representative In tbia locality tot
Willi I the greatest and latest novelty of iba
a*" Address NATIONAL NOVBLTT MFG. CO.
sai CHamberof Commerce Bldg., Kochester. N. T.
WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS
please state that you saw the Adver
tisement in this paper.
Def eel