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mm "J, {V5 4\ Fancy Vest With every Suit or Overcoat ordered THIS WEEK. Suit or Overcoat, Made to Order Including extra $5.00 Fancy Vest all for— 1 lew spring patterns in eluded in this sale. World Largest Tailors 3331. Superior St. Zenith, 2436 J. II. McMullen, Mar Deposit a portion of Your Earnings in the Savings Department of ORTHERN 1ATI0NAL BANK of Duluth Capital and Surplus ... $300,000.00 Pays Interest On Certificates of Peposit and Savings Accounts Savings Department Open from 6 to 8 o'clock Saturday Evenings. Alworth Building I the Patronage of all .ilON MEN A1D WOMEN whenever possible, and will give the best service I can. LUCIAN A. BARNES, Real Estate, Fire Insurance, Loans and Surety Bonds. 304 CENTRAL AVENUE. Euciac v'i'9 VV & AI ffi3..-' cohpiuh Furnish Electrio Oorrratt for LIGHT AMD FOWKK. MADE BEER TRADL PW-K KEGISTERf-D Bears This Label the Keg. The best of all American plays dealing with graft—financial, political and social, "The Lion and the Mouse,' Is coming to the Lyceum' Saturday and Sunday with matinees both days. Since the remarkable work of Charles Klein was first seen here many things have occurred which make the return of the drama a matter of psychological interest, in view of the numerous cases against the' trusts and captains of industry which are now before the courts. Five years ago "The Lion and the Mouse" would have been a failure for the simple reason that the public did not ask, "Where did he get it?" but rather "How much is he worth?" When the play was first produced the insurance scandals were just reaching the public nostrils. Then came the actions against the trusts and the railroads by which the public at large discovered that the so-called leaders in high finance were a little short of pirates. The story of "The Lion and the Mouse" is concisely this John Burkett Ryder, the richest man in the world, who controls the government, sud denly finds that his gigantic schemes are blocked by the decisions of a federal justice, Judge Rossmore. Ryder swears to ruin him and does financially, besides making arrange ments to have him impeached in the senate. The judge's daughter, Shirley Ross more, and Ryder's boy, Jefferson, meet on a trip abroad, fall in love and return engaged. The girl, learn ing of her father's impending dis honor, determines to save his good name. She writes a book, scoring Ryder, his ilk and their methods, which creates a sensation. Ryder sends for her and is so cap tivated by her wit, and womanliness, that he engages her to write his auto biography, making her a member of his household. Of course, discovery is certain and in a tremendous scene between these two, the lion and the mouse, the girl leaves the house. William H. Turner, soon to be seen here in George Ade's comedy, "Father and the Boys," played David Harum throughout the country with more than marked success over sixteen hundred times. The character of "Lemuel Morewood" in his latest laughing hit bids fair to out run Harum in the race for the public good will. Arrangements have been completed for the early appearance In this city of Al. H. Wilson and his company of noted players in his new singing com edy. "A German Prince." As a German dialect comedian and singer, whose songs can scatter sunshine in all kinds of weather, Mr. Wilson requires no further advance press mention than the mere announcement of his com ing to Insure crowded houses at each performance. "Madame X," the powerful melo drama, continues to be the dramatic sensation of the time. No play in recollection" has so swept the play goers of New York, while in Paris whence it came, it played for an enr tire season—an unprecedented record for the French metropolis. Henry W. Savage has made as wonderful a choice in the case of "Madame X" as he has hitherto In such triumphs, in other fields, as "The Merry Widow" or his other notable hits. In New York "Madame X" has been seen by 400,000 playgoers, an achieve ment absolutely without parallel in the modern history of the drama. "Madame X" will come to the Ly ceum in February, played by a nota bly fine company and staged exactly as in New York. TOM Ii. WILL TRY AGAIN CLEVELAND, Ohio, Jan 13.—Tom L. Johnson. has virtually announced himself as a candidate for mayor next fall. A reception was held for him at a single tax and free trade meeting in Chamber of Commerce hall this week. In a short address he spoke of the single tax movement and said that he would get into the campaign again for mayor next fall. Once there was an old goat that tried to pass himself off for a sheep. The watchful shepherd at once de tected the imposture. He killed the goat. But he sold the flesh for mutton. STAMPS MILWAUKEE, Jan. 13.—Compen sation for those out of employment aiid for those injured while at work will be the law in Wisconsin if the Wisconsin Federation of Labor can persyade the assembly to take such action. A joint resolution will be in troduced asking for an investigation of these subjects, and the possibility 4 of using the income derived Irom the natural resources to pay the bills. This was one of the most important legislative resolutions that was: con sidered by the legislature comihittee 6t the Wisfeonsin State* Federation of Labor at the meeting here. In addition to the above, twenty seven bills and resolutions will be in troduced in the Wisconsin assembly. Among them are: A bill for industrial insurance and employes' compensation modeled af ter the English law. Bills taking away the assumption of yx 'J. -f if w'" SCENE FROM "THE LION AND THE MOUSE." risk of the employe and the defenses of the fellow-servant rule. A bill forbidding judges from re ducing the awards in damage case verdicts. Permitting Boycott. A bill modifying the conspiracy act. This will permit strikers. to induce strikebreakers to quit work if it is done in a peaceable manner. Unions shall be permitted to use the boycott. No union shall be responsible for the crimes of its members. One of the most important bills is one compelling employers to give all employes thirty-six hours' rest every seven days. A bill will be introducted remitting all court costs for those who take oath that they are unable to pay. Must Advertise Strikes. Every employer who advertises for labor and has a strike on must state the fact in the advertisement. If the bill passes, the employers who break it will be subject to a fine of $1,000 or three years in the penitentiary. Another bill will authorize the state labor bureau to publish all labor con tracts between employer and employe. Still another bill will give state fac tory inspectors power to compel stores and factories to install facilities for ventilation when needed. New Eight-hour Law. The present eight-hour law for public buildings will be abolished if labor has its way and another sub stituted. The present law is not ef fective, it is held. Those who break the proposed law are likely to receive a fine varying from $50 to $1,000 or a prison sentence from thirty days to six months. A bill will be introduced giving cities permission to have a building devoted to industrial exhibits if they choose. The exhibits will consist of labor saving devices, and of devices dangerous to life and limb. A bill will be Introduced making an eight-hour day for all employed in mines. Bill for Women. A bill for an eight-hour day for women will be introduced. This will be modeled after the law in Illinois. A bill will be introduced amending section 4255 so that no aliens shall be denied the right to collect damages for relatives injured while at work. Organized labor does not believe that a firm which has a strike should be permitted to employ detectives from outside the state, and a bill covering this point will be Introduced. Labor also believes that trade schools should provide more technical education and less practical, and a 'bill to that effect will be introduced. Bakery Bill. An employes' sixty-one hour a week bakery bill will be Introduced. It is made sixty-one hours so that it can be carried to the United State Su preme court. The Supreme Court re cently held that the sixty-hour bak ery law passed by the New York legislature was unconstitutional. PUBLIC SIDES WITH HELLO GIRLS PRINCETON, Ind., Jan. IS.—As a result of the strike of telephone girls in the Cumberland office here.. Mana ger C. E. Lawrence has resigned. While he declines to make any state ment, it is believed he wanted to take some of the girls back and the com pany opposed this. The sympathy of thi majority of the patrons is said to favor the girls who are out and there Is talk of re taliatory measures. WASHINGTON, D. C., Jan. 13.— The Glllett bill for government clerks, a measure -that compels contribu tions to the pension fund from the clerks themselves, has' aroused out spoken denunciation of the plan from the alleged beneficiaries. Without concealing their names, a thing unheard of among Wash ington government employees, the clerks have rushed into print and ap peared at public meetings to unre servedly condemn the Glllett bill as a thing designed by their department heads to saddle the entire burden of pensions upon the least paid and the hardest worked. "They tell us," says Miss Ethel Smith, a clerk in the bureau' of fish eries, "to urge the Glllett bill lest congress give us nothing. That ar gument misses the" point. Perhaps we would rather have nothing than a thing as bad as this. Why should we want a law so utterly ruthless to our private and personal needs,* so humiliating to our' self-respect and independence? This bill is the work of minds that had no need to con sider Its application to themselves its whole object is to solve a pro blem for the government without ex pense to the government. Michael F. O'Donoghue, president of the U. S. Service Retirement as sociation, a clerks' organization, makes the following scathing critic ism of the Glllett bill: "The very theory' of the contribu tory plan virtually contemplates con fiscatory methods of extorting large portions from the low salaries of the employes, an injustice so brazen in conception that a private corporation would be liable to criminal prosecu tion should it even attempt such high handed financing. ."It has been ably pointed out that an employe can use the same money the government would extort under the Glllett bill and invest it in numer ous more profitable ways to protect himself and family, and that an in surance policy would afford protec tion to the family at death, whereas the contributory plan would afford only the m,oney paid into the fund. "Efficiency in the service would be promoted -to the highest standard if an employe were assured that after he had given his whole working life to the government he would be pro tected. Thousands of employes would not resign every year, as is the case now." The Gillett bill has the backing of the Taft machine and would have gone through smoothly, as pro grammed, if it were not for the pres ent uproar of dissent And even now, if the clerks' prdtests subside, the ipe&sure will become law. NTEREST-SERVING SOLONS SWING CLUB OVER HEADS OF OHIO NEWBPAPEftMEN. COLUMBUS, Jan. 13.—Senators Dean, of Sandusky county, and Huff man, of Butler county, the ringlead er* in the effort to ftiuzzle the leg islative correspondents-, have peculiar reasons for their actions. By persistently presenting to the voters of their districts the records of these two corporation allies, the newspapers came very near defeating both of them for re-election. Noth ing but an almost unprecedented democratic landslide saved them. Dean invented the scheme of re quiring newspaper correspondents who are to report the proceedings of the senate to secure their credentials from the senate committee on privi leges and elections* instead of from the lieutenant governor as heretofore. Dean, Huffman, Dore, Cetone, Shaf fer, and Yount comprise the Demo cratic majority on the committees that will appoint the members of the committee on privileges and elections They can stack the committee so that they can deny the privilege of the senate to every newspaper man whose writings don't suit them. Dean, Huffman and their like op pose having their constituents know how they put in their time in the legislature, working for the special Interests and against the people. I LBAVlfi. 7:SO a. ItlK p. Mi?, Mir Ron Fernandez Cigar Company. THE DULUTH S IRON RANGE IR. "VEKMUJON ROUTE." DtrMJUL WASHINGTON, Jan. 13.—From all over the country come glowing re ports of the first week's biittinast la the new postal savings banks. The statements of receipts at the offices one in each state—were not made public, but Postmaster General Hitch cock laid them before a specially called meeting of the board of postal savings bank trustees. There are several problems yet to be worked out by the administrative officers, but the board hoped to com plete all plans soon. BREWERY STRIKE THREATENS. SCRANTON, Pa., Jan. 13.—If the conference set for today between the representatives of the brewers be tween Pittston and Forest City and the representatives, "of the Brewery Workers' Union of this city does not end in an agreement, the probability is that the officers of the unidn will declare a strike Saturday morning, when the three years' agreement be tween the brewery workers and the brewers will expire. Caller—Do you allow your husband to smoke In the house? Mrs. Hewligus—Oh yes when he's smoking that old pipe it makes me forget my neuralgia. Mortgage Foreclosure Sale. Notice is hereby given, That default has been made in the condi tions of a mortgage executed by Charles M. Roush, mortgagor, to J. E. Comerford, morgagee, dated December 10th, T908, arid recorded In the office of the Register of Deeds of St. Louis County, Minnesota, on December l»th, 1908, at 12 o'clock M. in Book 142* of Mortgage*, on page 402 thereof that on December 20th, 1909, said mortgage was assigned by the said mortgagee, J. E. Comerford, to John F. Lliivtlle, and on June 5th, 1910, was assigned by the said assignee, John F. Linvllle, to William Easton, and both said deeds of assignment were recorded on Sep tember 12th, 1910, at 1 o'clock P. M. In said Register's office in Book 203 of Mortgages On page 63t that the amount claimed to be due and which fcr due upon the first instalment pay able upon said mortgage for principal and Interest is five hundred and sixty two dollars and fifty Cents that the premises described in and covered by said mortgage are Lots numbered Five and Seven and the East one half of the South West one quarter of Section numbered Nineteen of Township num bered Sixty-three North of Range num bered Thirteen West, situatedin St. Louis County, Minnesota, subject to a reservation of an undivided three fourths of all the mineral thereon, with the right to mine and remove the same that by virtue of the power of sale contained in said mortgage and pursuant to the statute in such case made and provided said mortgage will be foreclosed by the sale of said prem ises at public auction to the highest bidder for cash, by the sheriff of St. Louis County, Minnesota, at the -front door bf the county court house in the City of Duluth, St. Louis county, Min nesota, on February 2Bth, 1911, at ten o'cioek A. M., to satisfy the amount then due on said mortgage, including the taxes, if any, that may then have been paid thereon by the undersigned I assign-p, together with the costs cf this foreclosure and such sale, and seventy-five dollars, "statutory attor ney's fee" stipulated in said mortgage. Dated January 10th, 1911. WILLIAM EASTON, STATE OF MINNESOTA, COUNTY OF St. Louis.—ss. District Court, Eleventh Judicial Dls trlct. Charles B. Meyers, Dated Duluth, Minnesota, December 1st, 1910. LEO A. BALL, -aa Attorney for plaintiff, Office: 600-1 First National Bank Bldg. Residence: 2222 East Fifth Street. Duluth, Minnesota. ^*1911 Jan' 14' 21, HAVE YOtT WED THEM? DO AO and BE CONVINCED THAT THE TO 60 and BE CONVINCED THAT THE I LA VERDAD and LA LINDA I Clpto fl»e She float that mone? wfll buy, and I I 1.1k«. OlpM He She flaw* that mone? wfl1 buy, and that afclllrrt labor can produce. MAOTJTAOTDBED BY Mm* Haifcom, tty. Mmnm* BtwaNk, Mil GUftert sad Obsereation-Oafe Oar between Duluth and Illy. The Duluth & Izou Bauge furuishes daily sorvice to Virginia and other Missabe Range point*. All taraa&s arrive at and depart from Union Depot, Dttlntii. Your vacation should in clude a trip to beautiful Lake Vermilion* The rVermiKon Route" take* you there. 28' Feb' 4» ll» 18- JOHN V. TOBIN, President 1 1 Assignee of Mortgagee, S. F. WHITE, Attorney of Assignee, I No. 19, Phoenix Block, Duluth, Minn.1 L. W. Jan. 14, 21, 28, Feb. 4. 11, 18,1911 Plaintiff, vs. Julia L. Meyers, Defendant. The State of Minnesota to the above named' Defendant: Tou are hereby summoned and re quired to answer the complaint of the plaintiff in the above entitled action, which complaint has been filed in the office of the Clerk of said District Court, at the court house in the City of Duluth, in St. Louis County, Minne sota, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint on the subscriber at his offioe, in the City of Duluth, in said County of St. Louis, within thirty days after the service of this summons upon you, exclusive of the day of such service and if you fail to answer the said complaint within the time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action will apply to the court for the relief demanded in said com plaint. 9 I D. S. S. A. FY. CHARGE II TIME IU2B Havana ta AABXm 1XM m. p. m. On and after January 1st, 1911/ the Duluth, South Shore & Atlantic Ry. trains will arrive at and depart from SOO LINE ITHIOK STATION, 6th Ave. West and Superior Street, Duluth. LEAVE No. 8, daily, for all points East, 6:15 p.m. Dining car attached, ready to serve. No. 6, daily, ex. Sunday, Local, 7:45 a. m. ARRIVE Wo. 7, daily......... .10:80 a. nu No. 0, dally except Sunday.... .5:40 p. m. .* For information and sleeping car reservations apply to A. J. PERBIN, General Agent. Named shoes are frequently m^e im Noo Union factories. DO NOT BUY ANY SHOB no matter what its name, unless it bean a plain and readable impression of this UNION STAMP. All shoes without the UNION STAMP are always Non Union. Do not accept any excuse for absence of the UNION STAMP. Boot and Shoe Workers' Union 846 Summer Street, Boston, Mass. First National Bank Of Moth. Capital $500,000. Surplus and Undivided Ptafib $1300,000. U. S* GOVERNMENT DEPOSITARY. A. L. ORDEAN, Pirn. W. J. JOHNSON. A»*t Cashier. David Williams, Vice-Pro. W. W. WellvAat Cathie J.H.DIGHT, Catfaiet. 3 par cent Interest paid on Savings and Time Deposits, Duluth Fashion DKLICIOU8 8MOKE8, LUXURIOU6 AND DAINTY CHAS. L. BAINB, Secretary-Treasurer. CIGARS Mtede upon honor by skilled workmen, from best grade of Sfcva&a lieai Bnurta: Stooea, Dntath Faehion and lfataafa. New Phone 91& Old Phone 1006L DULUTH CIGAR CO. V* -1 \k 118 WB8T MICHIGAN ST. HOLDING YOUR OWN tm a ibaasM «hes yw eaa koU tt ia tta tovwtaf of %eer tbat will compete Willi the teat brewextee la thla ooaatry or Amps la the maaafautare et pn% iteh end aamy bottled beer, that pea •—ae the qualities of all with the pelateble flavor and itr«Dfth«la( qualities of the beat been Try tt aa aa eppetlasr aad »tealo it la fool DBlutb Brewing MattinQ Co TWIN PORTS TRANSFER CO. VP 'I