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Image provided by: Minnesota Historical Society; Saint Paul, MN
Newspaper Page Text
5 COME 4ND GONE "~r Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Clute and chil dren spent Sunday with relatives in Crow "Wing. Warren Farrow kas gone to Crosby, where he will operate the Newman livery. Bev. F. Benkosiak returned the lat ter part of last week from a visit in Chicago. Mrs. F. C. Ruth returned Saturday from a visit with friends in the twin cities. P. Monitor of Minneapolis, who has been a guest of Julius Jetka for some Lot 1 10 Doz. Ladies' Muslin Drawers, 4 tucks and lace edge. Better val ue then you usually get at 25c. 14th Anniversary Sale Only one to a customer Lot 3 15 Doz unbleached turkish towels, 19x43 in., weight 5 pounds to the doz. worth 25c each. 14th Anniversary Sale .., Oijly four to a customer TUT 14c Only 1 pair to a customer Lot 2 10 Doz. Ladies' Corset Covers, deep lace neck and armholes. Good 25c values. 14th Anniversary Sale 14c M4 12,000 Envelopes, cloth finish, wallet flap. The kind that always sells at 5c a package. 14th Anniversary 14c Sale, 6 packages for Lot 5 50 Boxes linen paper and envelopes to match. Some with initials. The 25c kind. 14th Anniversary Sale 14c Lot ff 20 Dcz. Brooms. Good grade corn, 3 sewed. Brooms are very high now and these are worth 35c each. 14th Anniversary Sale Only one to a customer 14c visit with time, left Saturday Jpr a relatives'at Wadena. Sam Chern returned Friday, from a business trip to Orey Eagle. A. R. Kohler returned Saturday to his home in Frazee, after a business visit in this city. -..v Bev! L. L. Harris, R. B. Harris and A. Ei Edling went to Brainerd on Wednesday xo£ a several days' busi ness visit. Wm." Butcher left Wednesday for a visit at Duluth and other points in the northern part of the state. Miss Charlotte Ferdinantzen return ed Monday to Swan River, where she if\J. ami Oponning ofOur Store will open at 8:30 a. m. We have some exceptional values to offer for this day at "I and will also have some special bargains at $14.00 in our Furniture and Rug Department Only one to a customer yf 1 A3?.* Lot 7 20 Doz. 14 qt. galvan ized pails. The 25c kind. 14th Anniversary Sale 14c Lota 12 Doz. 12-qt. dairy pails. Heavy tin and regular 25c pails. 14th Anniversary fl Sale I "TO Only one to a customer Following are a few of the articles in our furni ture department that will be 9x12 Velvet Rugs 9x12 Tapestry Rugs Morris Chairs, Rocker?, Couches, Dressers, Chif foniers, Library Tables, Dining Tables, Buffets and Brass Beds. Set of Dining Room Chairs and other articles. Oome and examine everything in this Greater Golden Rule, Alt goods are marked in plain figures and we have but one prtoe, which is the same to everybody. We buy and sell for oash only. 'Y- teaches school, after an over-Sunday visit at her home in St. Cloud. Mrs. Frank Bourassa left' Wednes day for a visit with her parents aft Deer Creek. Mrs. Ifary Yanoth of Flensburg was in the city® Wednesday, enroute to Gary, Ind., for a visit' with relatives and friends. Miss Maude Smalley was in Brain erd Wednesday and Thursday. John Stroman, W. H. Cox and B. B. Cox of Swanville were in the city Tuesday to attend the. Democratic meeting. Lot 9 5 Doz. heavy half cov ered dust pans. The 25c kind. 14th Anniversary Sale 14c LotJO Shaker Flour The 25c kind. 14th Anniversary Sale 14th Anniversary Sale Golden Rule The Store That Uvea Up to Its Name. WHICH ABE YOU 8AVXNO —MONEY ^OB COUPONS? Little Falls, Minn. Sifter. 14c Lottie Aluminum Salt and pepper shakers and toolh pick holders, loaded bot tom. E^ch set in a box and worth 25c. Lot 12 5 Doz. large china salad bowls, nicely decorated. Sell every day at 25c. 14th Anniversary Sale Lot 13 20 Doz. thin table tumblers. The kind that always sell at 5c each, 14th Anniversary Sale five for ... Lot 14 About 100 lace collars. Regular prices from 48z to $1.98. 14th Anniversary!/ Sale -.../i Price Lot IS 350 Yards table oilr cloth, light and dark col ors. Meritas brand which is the best there is* 14th Anniversary Sale Not over five yds. to a customer ••~r THE FATHERLAND Odds and Ends Gathered la and Austria. KAISER WELPS HIS FRIENDS Gwriwtiy NndMla Power—^Find Foa*| ail Man In Germari Africa—Women Teachire Barred In Vienna—Ger many to Have Three Cardinals—Ber lin's War on Electric 8igns.: "Now. I've taken care of all my friends," remarked Emperor William' the other day after affixing his signa ture to. a Commission advancing Gen eral von Plueskow to the command of the Eleventh army corps. General Plueskow, who stands six feet five inches in his stockings,. Is known as 'Loug Plueskow'' in the army, of which he is the tallest officer. What the kaiser meant was be now has .placcd in high military or civil positions practically ail the jntimate friends who served with him in the First regiment of foot guards at Pots dam a generation ago. Five-other officers like.Plueskow are commanding generals of army corps. General von Chefius, formerly the kaiser's regimental adjutant, has just been appointed his majesty's personal military representative in the entour age of the czar. Prince Lichnowsky was made ambassador to London. Herr von "'reutler is Prussian minis ter at Munich and accompanies the kaiser abroad as the representative ot the Berlin foreign office, and Baron von Bodelscbwingb Plettenberg, who already had been elevated to the peer age, was recently made a count. The kais"r is also fond of distin guishing former members of his Bonti university "Borussia" student corps. Germany and Sea Power. Admiral Breusing, the secretary of the Pan-German league, recently delivered a speech on the development of the German navy during the last twenty five yea re. He declared that the time had passed when the British navy was able to surprise the German navy and when Germany might one day learn from the newspapers thai it had a navy. England had also abandoned the plan of blockading the North sea and today only considered a blockade of the Ger man coast. The future of the German •eopTe was therefore based entirely pon their navy. The admiral continued that in.twenty years Germany would be unable to feed her own people with her own produce and would be compelled to take refuge in Importation. If, then, they had not a sufficient navy they would become England's vassal. Their, place was neither before nor behind England, but at ber side. Three German Cardinals. It was reported in Berlin that the German government has let the Vati can understand that the fatherland expects henceforth to be .represented by three members in the college of cardinals. The same report says that informal assurances have, already been received that Dr. Hartmann. archbish op of Cologne, and Dr. Fruebwirt, the. papal nuncio at Munich, are slated for red hats. The leading candidate for Cardinal Kopp's successorship in case the Vati can decides that Germany must re main content with one cardinal is the royal Prince Max of Saxouy, the priest brother of the reigning King Frederick August Prince Max. who is forty three years of age, would be one of the youngest ecclesiastics ever to re ceive the red cap. He has been a priest eighteen years and since 190G professor of canonical law at the Co logne Theological seminary. Find Fos*il Man. A valuable anthropological discovery, in the* northern part of German East Africans'- reported by Dr. Hans Reick of the Geological and. Paleontological institute of Berlin university. It is a fossil human skeleton in a magnificent state'uf preservation. This is held to -prove that "many tens—nay, hundreds -oif thousands of years ago a iiigbly developed fare of men inhabited the .African continent.". The remains seem to be of a com pleteness very unusual in such, cases. Not only is the skull perfect with ail the teetlf, but also the "entire frame work of the body—the thorax, shoul ders,, pelvis and extremeties." The skeleton is ascribed to the di luvial epoch, but anything like a pre cise estimation of Its age will only be possible after a thorough examination of the remains of extinct aulmals among which it was found. v" The *Yf I low Peril." The news that Tiirkey intends to man her latest Dreadnoughts with a crew of Japanese sailors and marines under the command of Japanese offi cers, because she is too anxious to beat Greece to wnlt until ber owu peo ple can be sufficiently weli trained, has created an enormous sensation in Ger tnapy, and tbe cry is raised from/all sides that the powers must not permit such a tiling which would bring the yellowperil dangerously Hose. The time has ph^d-when Germans elt any sympathy, with .Turkey, and since that country gave In to the'de» maiMls of Itusftian and sent General Limann von SanVlors and bis military mission away from Constantinople Into the obscurity ot Asia Minor Germans are at a loss to (ind words strong enough to express .their disgust and abomination of the once idolized Enver Pasha Women Teachers Barred. Women have been shut out, tempo rarily at 'least, from any new places in the teachiug staffs of the Vienna public schools. The ory of unjust dis crimination has been raised.atidtbe whole fpiestion of women's employ ment in Austria is now under review. The exclusion of women candidates for l^id^'Nrin the public scbcMris,is leased by the Vienna city council on the |tW ground that "so few vacancies exist that no further applications for em-, ploynieut of wonieu teachers will be received until further notice." Noth ing Is said, however, about men teach ers. Since the population Is increasing steadily and new schools are constant ly required the council's action is re garded sis extraordinary. Some trace it to the agiratiou among women teach ers for pay oh equal terms with men. American Defeats Landlord. Mrs. tirat-e MaeUenzie Wood of Kan sas City, who rpn lucts a musical studio in Berlin, has \v.u loi-al prominence by winning a ease agaiust a.landlord who sued lc*r fm- making excessive noise. Other tenants in the building.object ed to Mrs. Mackenzie Wood's pupils' piano playing and singing. Among methods adopted to indi-we ber to fore go.the music privilege eontained in her lease was the incessant blowing of foghorns in ihe ro:ms below her apart ment while the lessons were in prog ress. The landlord f&mttly sued her op the ground that the peace of his building was systematically disturbed: but, al though he-carried thecal to three suc cessive courts', he was finally beateu. Must Stop Brutality. A great sensation has been caused by the Bavarian \v:ir minister's order pmhi'niting the brutal treatment of sol (iitT-s. In future noncommissioned offi cers abusing their authority will risk losing 1 hi'ir rank and pension, and com missioned officers will risk being cash iered. Maron von Kress, the miuister in question, says that officers must re move from their minds the idea that brutality is necessary to the mainte nance of discipline, tie says that a be meaning treatment is of .the greatest danger to army discipline and tbat re en.its ought to feel assured of just and human? treatment. Not only actual brutality, but bad language, is forbid den. Berlin's Olympic.Games. The people of Berlin are looking focr ward with great anticipation to the Olympic games iu 191(1. when they hope to establish themselves as Eu ropean sport champions, even if they are prepared to run second to Ameri cans once more Xobudy worries the least because the reichstag. has temporarily refused to subsidize the games, for, in the first place, there, is plenty of time for the rei-hstag to change its mind, as it un RHibtetlly will, and there is besides plenty- of money on hand, contributed by the state of Prussia, the city of Ber-' iiit and many private parties, to enable the committee in charge of the games to go ahead with all their plans.. Seeks to Win Poles. The kaiser has ordered Prince Eitel Friedrich to I'osen In command of the cavalry sharpshooters' regiment. It is quite novel in Germany to send a rinct? of i!ie imperial family to a ruvinca where Prussia seemingly is Generally disliked. The kaiser undoubt edly hopes l»y giving the German Poles a testitmyiial of his confidence in (hem to '-vin sympathy for the empire of which Prussia is at the head. Princess Kite! Friedrich will also go into residence at the I'osen royal pal ace. Iiumors that^he prince's removal Co i'osen was Only the prelude to a ilivone between the prince and prin cess are .thus shown to be only-a-silly* fabrication. War on Electric Signs, The rapid increase in electric adver tising signs has caused th£ police au thorities of Berlin to issue stringent regulations as to the number, size and height- or.such illuminations. The doctors heartily second the po lice department's action hnd are filling the press with communications point ing otit the alleged harm which the flash signs do to the eyesight. Tlie Friedrichst rasse has now be come* almost as brilliant with electric, signs as Broadway in the region Jaif Times square, while Potsdamer platz. Berlin's Piccadilly circus, is probably the most brilliant spot in the world at night. V-*' '1^' Give. Birds a Chance. Tho Germau coh)ii}?il department bas ordered that, birds'of paradise may no longer be bunted for their plumnge in German New Guinea, but Dr. WII helm Solf, minister for the colonies,^ in an nouuelug this ju'ohibitlon to the Im perial parliament stated that it was for eighteen numths otily. He had1 originally contemplated a permanent prohibition, as the Radicals demanded, but a report from an ex|ie ditlon s^nt to the. Interior of New Guinea saying that there were plenty of birds there ttnd no danger of tbeii extinction had caused him-to modify his-otdbr. COME ANti .. Wm. O'Bhea of Minneapolis the city on a business visit Moni Chas. Gravel of: Pierz was "in city on business Tuesday. :j% rem Koop and Kiss .Gertrodi Koop of Brainerd spent Sunday pritfi friendi in this city. Mr* Clara E. Fuller returned day from the twin cities, wheri ijtt^ spent two months with friends. "K'tf Miss Naomi He« berg has returiirad' from St. Cloud and has resumed' duties in the office of the county perintendent of schools, after re, ering from an operation for the S-tep moval of^an abscess. I. W. Bouck of Boyalton was in tke eity on business Tuesday. Bay Parr, who has been attending^ the local business college, returned his Jhome in Grey Eagle Tueiday. JBeth Warner returnM^Tue^daj£ home in White Beu^aft|r visit at the home of Mrs. C.^IR Browa| Mrs. Mi JWka of Perhim leff Tuesday for Antigo, Wis., after a yisijt at the home of Lf Janski. Mr. and Mrs. Barney Burtol ai% il Minneapolis, called there by the illneSg of Mrs. Burton's father, J. Deutsch. Sol. Shapiro is confined to his home, suffering with an abcess. 1 -7-^ Mrs. Jos. Schwanke of Randall is atl^ the hospital, suffering with blood poi- Barney Grezea of the West side is.^-- confined to his home with an attack of®a appendicitis. Mrs. B. Herron, who has been quite ill with pneumonia, is greatly improv ed this week. The interior of the Quality Shop is being remodeled and a new steel ceil ing is being put in. -v" Miss Gertrude Enke has taken ap position in the office of the register of ^i deeds in the court house. B. H. Fellbaum has .registered- the name of his farm in Culdrum as the Spruce Grove Stock Farm. -ip The interior of the Hub and Burton stores is being lemodeled and re-decor-'^ ated and a. new floor has been laid in the dry goods section. A very successful farmers' meeting was held at Ft. Ripley Friday evening, --i J- S. Klinka, agricultural instructor at the local high school gave an instruc*1^ tive talk on "Potatoes." .I* Thomas Picotte of Belle Prairie lias disposed of his farm there and will move to this city in the near future^ having purchased the house occupied by G. C. Raymond, on Second street northeast. C. B. Buckman of this city has been delegated by the federal court to take charge of a potato warehouse at Fer gus Falls. This property has been dis puted for some time and the court took' this action. The potatoes will be sold and the court will then decide who is entitled to the proceeds of th sale., Seeds Seeds* •.1- We have the full line a of Ferry's, Rice^s and'Q Northrup King & Co.'s garden and flower seeds in packages, and North-J rup King & Co.'s bulk^ seeds of all kinds. These are all New Seeds None carried over from Jast season We also have field and -is grass1seeds of all kinds Clover, Timothy, Red Top, Millet, etc. Give us a chance before you buy your seeds.*3? Come in and see oar Jl line and get our prices. Ask for the Tickets ai don't forget to get a pound of our Toga Coffee at 30 -t OR j: CdcHiial at 40 c»ts -vV-'f They are Sure. to Pleaa% YOTJBS FOB QUALITY, SBBYICOR. AND PBIGE RMUSKE AJOHNSON TAKOY GBOCEBIEa AW OP ALL KINDS.