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ARMS' ^H'V i^r'"' PA It? to I _tf "i'ifr' A Good Ttalnji Look Into It ROSELAND O S Roseland, June 22—N. Dykema and family and W. Van Buren and family spent last Sunday evening at the J. Znidema home.. Miss Angie Knoll visited with Miss Tracy sBuikema in Raymond from Friday until Sunday. Some of the young folks from here attended the circus at Willmar and all report having had a nice time. Mr. and Mrs. D. Van Dyk and Mr. and Mrs. Dekker spent last Fri day evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. Van Egmond. Mr. and Mrs. A. Knoll called at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Knott of Raymond last Thursday. Mrs. S. Dykema, Mrs. A. Abbenga and Mrs. H. Brouwer spent last Thursday with Mrs. C. Kohrs. Abbie Damhof and Katie Hoffman were entertained for supper at the H. Dragt home last Sunday evening. A number from here attended the services in the Whitefield school house last Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. H. Brouwer spent last Friday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. Dragt. Henry Holtz had the misfortune of breaking his auto while coming home from the circus last Wednes day evening. The young folks rendered a sur prise on Mr. and Mrs. W. Stob last Tuesday evening. A good time was had by all. Messrs. Frank and George Stra felda and Misses Jane Van Dyk, Lil lian Strafelda and Otillie Holecheck spent last Friday evening with the Dykema young folks. Miss Tracy Buikema andd broth er Peter of Raymond worshipped here last Sunday. Miss Lillian Strafelda and brother Frank spent Saturday evening with the Sobony young folks. The Sunday School has decided upon giving a picnic the fourth of July in grove of Mr. H. Bruggers. Everybody welcome. NEW LONDON, ROUTE 3. New London, June 23—Mr. and' Mrs. A. P. Bergeson of Willmar came uy by auto Saturday evening! ifor an over Sunday visit at the Au gust Olander home. Miss Ethel Ber geson who has been visiting with relatives for the past three weeks, a« oompanied them home. The Misses Hazel and Sylvia Olander entertained a number of Relatives and friends Sunday after noon and evening. Gustav Holm was a Spieer caller ^Saturday. Mrs. Carl Bredberg and children, Clifford and Buford have been visit ing at Henning Olander's the past [week. The Misses Alma and Minnie Nordstedt visited at Carl Soder lund's Sunday afternoon. Quite a number from here attend ed the Old Settler's picnic at Spieer fToesday of last week. The Misses Olga and Florence 'Bredberg of New London and Ethel Bergeson of Willmar, have been spending the last week at the Alfred Olander home. Services will be held in the Swed ish Lutheran church Sunday fore noon at 11 a. m. PRICE PER GALLON N buying paint, many people make the mistake of simply considering first cost. They think only of the price per gallon. This results In the saleetibnof a low-pric ed, short-lived, adulterated paint. The right way to buy paint is to con sider^—not primarily what it costs per gallon —but spreading power, ease of application and durability. On account of pure lead, zinc, and linseed oil used, perfect form ula, and fine grinding, B. P. S. Paint is fully 10 per cent, easier to apply than coarse, adulterated paint. As cost of applying paint is about twice as expensive as the paint itself, this 10 per cent, saving of your painter's time is important. We have the agency for the following paint at prices as follows: B. P. S. Paint, per gallon $2.00 Lion Brand Paint, per gallon 2.00 Richardson's Paint, per gallon 1.25 Moore's Paint, per gallon 1.75 We also have a full line of all kinds of Oils, Brushes, Varnishes, etc. OHSBERG, SELVIG & CO.is PENN0CK. Pennoek, June 23—The Board of Equalization met at Lynn Ander son's Monday. Oscar Carlberg purchased a new Overland from Lynn Anderson last week. C. G. Carlberg bought a second hand Overland touring car from Chas. Wallin of Willmar last week." Messrs. A. J. Lindgren, Gust Lind man and S. P. Sleberg are building a barn for August Carlberg southwest of town. L. M. Steberg made a business trip to St. Paul Thursday, returning on Friday. Amund Anderson leaves today for Glenwood to attend the Gulbrands dalslaget at that place June 24-25. J. O. Ecklund and Obert Ellingson retained last Thursday to Pennoek after a two weeks' visit at Middle River, Minn. J. P. Johnson and A. M. Lindgren left for La Bolt, S. D., and vicinity to visit relatives and friends. They returned home Sunday. August Anderson visited with his brother Fred Anderson north of Willmar last Sunday. E. L. Thorpe and family spent Sunday at Eagle Lake. G. C. Hang and family and Wm. Johnson spent Sunday at Eagle Lake. P. E. Erickson, a former Pennoek boy, now a teacher at Mcintosh, call ed on friends at Pennoek Friday and Saturday. Mr. Erickson was on iris, way to Madison, Wis., Avhere he will attend the University. Mr. Erickson has made a success along education al lines. Messrs. G. C. Haug and Christ Christenson went out to Robert Som erville's place to put lightning rods on his farm buildings last week. Oscar Hagman of Mamre took his mother and grandma out for an auto ride Sunday afternoon. They called at the Emil Lofven home. Mr. Lynn Anderson has a four year-old horse that weighs 1,300 lbs. that he will sell reasonably, if sold soon. LONG LAKE. Long Lake, June 24—The Long Lake Mission Band will meet with Misses Muriel and Ruth Carlson next Saturday afternoon and evening, June 28th. Everybody welcome. The Misses Alma Martinson, Lil lie Larson and Hans Hagen were Sunday guests at the E. F. Eckblad home. PENNOCK REAL ESTATE COMPANY Miss Ruth Carlson visited at the Jalmer Larson home Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Nels Erickson visit ed with friends in this vicinity a few days last week. List Your Farms With Us The Farm Loan Department is at your service and terms will be made satisfactory to you. We write Life Insurance, We write Fire Insurance, We write Tornado and Cyclone Insurance, We write Hail Insurance, in the best companies. Come in and talk it over with us. We solicit your business and assure you careful attention at all times. J. P. JOHNSON Pennoek, Minnesota Miss Olia Larson assisted Mrs. E F. Eckblad a few days last week. Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Eckblad and daughter Margery will leave Tuesday for Pierson, S. D., where they will attend the Estvick-Eekblad wedding, which occurs Wednesday, June 25. Elmer Grorud visited at his paren tal home Sunday. Miss Minnie Grorud is at present doing the housework at E. F. Eck blad's. Miss Amanda Netland is at present assisting at Andrew Gustrud's. Miss Hannah Larson visited with her friends, Clara and Myrtle Hol seth Monday evening. Mrs. Rev. Hamre left last Friday for a visit with friends in Litchfield. Jalmer Larson and Alfred Estvick attended the town meeting held at C. C. Birkeland's last Monday. :.T,i^^^S^^S5a&w^2pS? WILSON MESSAGE ONTHECURRENCY President Urges Congress to Pass New Law. ASKS FOR ACTION AT ONCE Chief Executive Tells Congress the Need of Immediate Changes In the Banking Laws. Washington, June 23.—President Wilson personally read the following message to both houses of congress in joint session: "Mr. Speaker, Mr, President, Gen tlemen of the Congress—It is under the compulsion of what seems to me a clear and imperative duty that I have a second time this session sought the privilege of addressing you in person. I know, of course, that the heated season of the year upon us, that work in these cham bers and in the committee rooms is likely to become a burden as the sea son lengthens and that every consid eration of personal convenience and personal comfort, perhaps, in the cases of some of us, considerations of personal health even, dictate an early conclusion of the deliberations of the session. But there are occasions of public duty when these things which touch us privately seem very small, when the work to be done is BO pressing and so fraught with big consequence that we know that we are not at liberty to weigh against it any point of personal sacrifice. We are now in the presence of such an occasion. It is absolutely im perative that we should give the busi ness men of this country a banking and currency system by means of which they can make use of the free dom of enterprise and of individual Initiative which we are about to be stow upon them. Must Leave Tools of Action. "We are about to set them free. We must not leave them without the tools of action when they are free. We are about to set them free by re moving the trammels of the pro tcetive tariff. Ever since the Civil war they have waited for this eman cipation and for the free opportuni ties it will bring with it. It has been reserved for us to give it to them. "Now both the tonic and discipline of liberty and maturity are to ensue. There will be some readjustments of purpose and point of view. There will follow a period of expansion and new enterprise, freshly conceived. It is for us to determine now whether it shall be rapid and facile and of easy ac complishment. This it cannot be un less'the resourceful business men who are to deal with the new circum stances are to have at hand and ready for use the instrumentalities and con veniences of free enterprise which in dependent men need when acting on their own initiative. "It is perfectly clear that it is our duty to supply the new banking and currency system the country needs and that it will immediately need it more than ever. Need of Currency Changes. "We must act now, at whatever sacrifice to ourselves. It is a duty which the circumstances forbid us to postpone. I should be recreant to my deepest convictions of public obliga tions did I not press it upon you. with solemn and urgent insistence. "The principles upon which we should act are also clear. We must have a currency, not rigid as now, but readily, elastically responsive to sound credit, the expanding and con tracting credits of every day transac tions, the normal ebb and ffow of personal and corporate dealings. Our banking laws must mobilize reserves, must not permit the concentration anywhere in a few hands of the monetary resuurces of the country or their use for speculative purposes in such volume as to hinder or im pede or stand in the way of other more legitimate, more fruitful uses. And the control of the system of banking and of issue which our new laws are to set up must be public, not private must be vested in the government Itself, so that the banks may be the instruments, not the masters, of business and of individu al enterprise and initiative. Committees Ready to Report. "The committees of the congress to which legislation of this character is referred have devoted careful and dispassionate study to the means of accomplishing these objects. They have honored me by consulting me. They are ready to suggest action. I have come to you, as the head of the government and the responsible leader of the party in power, to urge action now, while there is time to serve the country deliberately and as we should, in a clear air of common counsel. "I appeal to you with a deep con viction of duty. I believe that you share this conviction. I therefore ap peal to you with confidence. I am at your service without reserve to play my part In any way you may call upon me to play it In this great enterprise of exigent reform which it will dignify and distinguish us to per form and discredit us to neglect" FRIEDMANN QUITS AMERICA Berlin Physician Fails to Say When He Will Return. New York, June 18.—Dr. Frederich P. Friedmann, the Berlin physician who announced several months ago that he had a cure for tuberculosis, has sailed for home. His institute here was closed recently, after the board of health had forbidden the use 9f his vaccine. The doctor did not lay whether he would return. WILLMAB TRIBUNE. WE0HE8DAV JUNE M. lil CHARLES S. WHITMAN. Candidate for Mayor of New York Confers With Roosevelt. Photo fov American Prpss Association. WHITMAN VISITS COLONEL New York Mayoralty Candidate at Oyster Bay. New York, June 20.—District Attor ney Whitman journeyed out to Oyster Bay and called on Colonel Roosevelt. Neither Colonel Roosevelt nor Mr. Whitman would divulge the details of the conference. Mr. Whitman's bear ing, however, was not that of a man who had just met with a serious re buff. Colonel Roosevelt made this state ment regarding the conference: "I am a Nassau county man and have the interest in the mayoralty only that every good citizen has that is I hope to see nominated the man who will make the best mayor, if elected, and who has the best chance of being elected." THIRTEEN KILLED IN TROLLEY ACCIDENT Confusion of Orders Results in Gars Colliding. Vallejo, Cal., June 20.—A confusion of orders that may never be explained brought death to thirteen persons when two electric trains met head on near here while running at high speed. Eleven were instantly killed, two died within a short time and three of the thirty or more injured persons are hurt fatally. The single car of the southbound train and the first car of the north bound were telescoped and not a per son aboard either car escaped injury. The conductor* on one of the trains, who took orders by telephone from the dispatcher just before the acci dent, is among those probably fatally Injured. The wreckage was heaped high on the roadbed after the crash. It was several hours before the last of the victims was removed. A house mov ing outfit and the appliances of the Vallejo fire department were needed to liberate them. FOUND GUILTY OF MURDER Denver Jury Gives Harold Henwood Death Penalty. Denver, June 19.—The jury in the second trial of Harold Henwood for ihe killing of George E. Copeland re turned a verdict of first degree mur der and prescribed the death penalty. Henwood shot George E. Copeland, Sylvester von Phul of St. Louis and James W. Atkinson while in the bar room of a local hotel on the night of May 24, 1911. Copeland and Atkin son were bystanders and were hit by stray bullets. Copeland and Von Phul died. TWENTY ITALIANS KILLED But Arabs Are Routed In Severe Engagement. Rome, June 20.—In a severe battle fought between the Italian troops and the Tripolitan Arabs at Ettangi one Italian officer and nineteen soldiers were killed and five officers and 217 men wounded. According to an official dispatch from Derna, General Salsa surprised a native camp and hard fighting en sued, lasting an hour. The Arabs, he reports, were com' pletely routed. Their losses are un known. {IX ON "HUNGER STRIKE" Militant Leaders in London Jail Re* fuse to Eat. London, June 19.—The six suffra gist leaders who were sentenced to ong terms of imprisonment for con spiracy began a "hunger strike" im mediately after entering the jail. Two militants, Mrs. Marianne Clar endon-Hyde and Miss Bunting of the Women's Freedom league, were sen tenced to fourteen days* imprison ment for obstructing the police at a meeting. CAPSIZES IN WIND STORM Mine Federal Employes Drown When Boat Upsets. New Madrid, Mo., June 23.—Nine members of a party of fourteen Unit ed States engineers and other gov ernment employes were drowned near here when the United States •urvey boat Beaver, which the party was aboard, was capsized in a wind itorm. ABOUT THE STATE f-'juv News of Especial Interest to Minnesota Readers. 'UK- •it' ROADS WILL OBEY DECISION No Further Fight to Be Made Against Supreme Court Ruling -1 in Minnesota Rate Oases. /ft a conference with the members of I the state railroad and ware house, commission at St. Paul, held behind locked doors, representatives of the railroads affected by the de cision of the United States supreme court in the famous Minnesota rate casfe agreed to put into effect, as soon as I possible, the state rates declared valid by the supreme court These include the 2-cent passenger rati, the merchandise freight sched ule! tested from Nov. 15, 1906, until the* Sanborn decision July 1, 1911, and thej commodity freight rate enacted by jthe legislature but never put into effect because of the injunction pro ceedings. Those attending the meeting were President Carl R. Gray of the Great Northern, Vice President J. N. Jack son? of the Great Northern and Attor neys Donnelly of the Northern Pacific, Shejehan of the Chicago, St. Paul, Min neapolis and Omaha and Clark of the Minneapolis and St. Louis. The con ference lasted for more than two hoars and no outsiders were admitted. There were other railroad men there, but their names could not be learned, as they evaded scrutiny by going out of the side door. No Further Contest. By the terms of the agreement the railroads will make no further contest in the matter of establishing the state ratbs. Refunds due to shippers for overcharges during the period of liti gation representing the difference be tween the present rates and those made by the state will be paid at once. This agreement means Minnesota railroads will be called upon to dis tribute approximately $3,000,000 within the next six months. In 1909, after the commodity rate had been enjoined, the legislature passed a law requiring the railroads to file schedules each month showing all shipments made under this law and the difference be tween the state rate and those charged in'each particular case. These schedules have been kept up toj date and the railroads will pay o^er to the state commission the amount represented, to be distributed by the commission to the shippers en titled to the rebates. Attorney Gen eral Smith will be asked to formulate •a" plan whereby this may be accom plished. The commodity rebates rep resent approximately one-half of the total amount of claims. SEVEN MEN KILLED IN FREIGHT WRECK /ictims Believed to Have Been Beating Their Way. Clinton, la., June 23.—Seven men urere killed and another probably fatal ly injured in the wreck df a freight :rain on the St. Paul road, near here. A freight train, speeding down a four-mile hill between Delmar and Downs Station, crashed head on into gravel train two miles east of Del mar. Both engines were wrecked and twenty-eight cars were piled on the lemolished gravel train. Two wrecking crews worked six Hours clearing their way to the car tn which the bodies were found. The eictims have not been identified and ire believed to have been beating their way in an empty freight car. None of the crew of either train was Hurt DULUTH STRIKE I S ENDED Saw Mill Employes Return to Work and Plants.. Resume. Duluth's saw mill strike, which threatened to spread to the mills at Cloquet and Virginia and completely tie up the lumber industry of North ern Minnesota, is broken. All of the Duluth mills have resumed work. The union leaders tried desperately to keep the men from returning to work, but their efforts were unavail ing. The union men represented but a small percentage of the employes of the mills and most of the men were eager to return to work after their two weeks of idleness. About 1,200 men were affected by the strike. Killing Follows Card Game. John Mattilinen, an iron range mi ner, was shot and killed at Biwabik by Rade Tatovich, according to the police, following a quarrel over a game of cards. The men were drink ing. Tatovich fled and has not been found. when Tuberculosis Threatens get fresh air, sunshine and above ail the cell-building, energy-producing properties of SCOTTS EMULSION. Its prompt use often thwarts tuberculosis. 13-29 W£§S* •Jf0*&r -*.'%t{ *$~i BLAZE COSTS TWO LIVES Eight Others Injured In Destructive ,, "...-Flni at Minneapolis. Captain John Gray died in a few hours from his Injuries, Ladderman Frank Kanesky was almost Instantly killed and eight others were injured In a fire which gutted the North Side high school at Minneapolis. Fifty firemen were in imminent dan ger when a wall of the old main build ing fell. Fire Chief Charles W. Ring er, Assistant Chief Sandy Hamilton, District Chief Edward Thielen and twenty-five firemen escaped the fall ing wall by running from beneath it into the burning building. Twenty five other firemen ran back from the wall, but ten of them were caught. Only the heroic work of rescuers, who dug with bare hands into the' fiery bricks and concrete, prevented the death of the men who were burled beneath the tons of debris. The firemen were seeking to gain a vantage point from a porch when the walls fell, trapping them all. The en trapped men remained under the de bris of the fallen walls for more than an hour, their comrades forsaking the fire to assist in the work of rescue!. MOVED TO ST. PAUL IN 1849 Mrs. Anna Acker Rice Dies at an Ad vanced Age. Mrs. Anna Acker Rice, widow of Hon. Edmund Rice, at one time mayor of St. Paul and congressman from Minnesota, who has been seri ously 111 at her home in St. Paul for two weeks, is dead. Her decline was due to age and, while her condition had been serious only for two weeks, her health had gradually failed for two years. Mrs. Rice was eighty-four years old and had been a resident of St. Paul since 1849, when she came to this state with her father, the late Will iam Acker, and her husband, who had just made her bis bride. HUSBAND SECURES THIRD OF ESTATE Will Contest Involving Million Dollars Decided. One-third of the $3,000,000 estate in Minnesota left by Mrs. Mary M. Owsley will go to her husband, Dr. James Owsley of Duluth, according to an opinion handed down by the supreme court. The estate consists of some of the most valuable mining property on the Mesabi range. Mrs. Owsley was the widow of Wil helm Boeing when she married the doctor. Boeing had valuable iron properties which he bequeathed to his.wife and three children.. He died in 1890 ?and his Wife moved to Vir ginia, Minn., where she married Dr. Owsley in 1898. She died in Decem ber, 1910, and by her will left Dr. Owsley $35,000 and an annuity of $10, 000 a year. The remainder of the property went to her children by her first marriage. The entire estate is valued at $8,000,000, of which $3,000, 000 is located in Minnesota. Dr. Owsley refused to accept his share as provided by the will and brought suit to obtain a one-third in terest in the Minnesota property to which the surviving spouse is entitled under the state law. PLAY STARTS FATAL FIRE One Child Is Dead of Burns and An. other May Die. A five-year-old son of Ole Peterson was burned to death and another child of two years was probably fa tally burned when a barn on the Pe terson farm near Slayton was set on fire while the children were playing with matches. Son of Educator Kills Self. Harold Robertson, twenty-two years of age, son of Dr. E. P. Robertson, president of Wesley college, Grand Forks, N. D., hanged himself with a handkerchief to a bedpost in his room at Minneapolis. He had left his nineteen-year-old wife and their baby at the home of his wife's sis ter before going to his room. His relatives say he had trouble with his father. FIVE BELIEVED DROWNED Searching Party Fails to Locate Launch Riders. Keokuk, la., June 22.—Five people who made up a launch party on Lake Cooper, above the dam on the Missis sippi river, are believed to have drowned. They are John Laughlin, Alfred J. Gross, Miss Mamie Wilson, Mrs. Mary Wright and Miss Pauline Marks, all prominently known here. A searching party was able to find no clue and hope of finding them alive has been abandoned. Girl Striker Asks Damages. St. Louis, June 22.—Mrs. Sadie For rest, one of the telephone girls out on strike here, has sued the South*, western Telegraph and Telephone company for $10,000. She alleged that F. O. Lurlow, manager of the Caban ne exchange, threw.her against a bannister and choked her when she visited the exchange a day or two ago. DIVE COSTS MAN HIS LIFE In Packing House Laborer Drowns Mississippi River. Andrew Soucek, about twenty-one, years of age, a Bohemian laborer, was drowned In the Mississippi', river at South St. Paul. Soucek, with^ Joe Shalerpq, a countryman, twenty! four years old, was swimming when the accident occurred. C^ Soucek dove and failed to come up. His companion gave the alarm to the folice. SstSfi ^MMSiii -y^-. Vs' r~~'' QUEEN VICTORIA. Wife of Spanish Ruler Again Becomes Mother. Queen Victoria of Spain became the mother of a baby boy at the La Gran da palace. This is the sixth child born to King Alfonso XIH. and Queen Victoria, formerly Princess Victoria Ena of Battenberg, married in 1906. G0MPERS APPEAL GRANTED United States Supreme Court Will Review Contempt. Washington, June 20.—Chief Jus tice White granted an appeal to the supreme court for Samuel Gompers, John Mitchell and Frank Morrison, labor leaders, convicted of contempt of court in the noted Buck's stove and range case. The appeal will be heard after October. PIONEER COAL MAN DEAD Edward N. Saunders Passes Away at St. Paul. E. N. Saunders, one of St. Paul's best known business men and pioneer in the coal trade in Minnesota, is" dead. He had been ill for several weeks, suffering from stomach trouble and other complications. Mr. Saunders was president of the Northwestern Fuel company, of which he was one of the founders, a director of the First National bank, the Merchants National bank and of the Northwestern Trust company. He also had extensive holdings in Eastern coal mines and other in terests. 8eemed Likely. The young man bad gone to the heiress* father—always a ticklish Job but be took bis courage with an iron grip "Sir," he blurted out, "I want to ask you for your daughter's hand.". The old man, not in the lest discon certed, said: "Which hand? The one she signs checks with, I suppose?" London Stray Stories. WJT£0&33£M Come in now and be'measured for that new summer suit. We are merchant tailors, and carry a.full stock of the latest patterns. Years of successful tailoring and hundreds of satisfied customers are our best advertisement. Onr Ladies' Tailoring Department is at the service of the ladies of Willmar and vicinity. It is in charge of expert workmen, who will give perfect satisfaction. SPECIAL NOTICE We have just equipped pur shop with latest dry-cleaning machinery, and am better prepar ed than ever before to give prompt attention to all orders for French Dry Cleaning. Berg & Soderling 'Phone 545 We believe that our 30 years^df ARCTANrm .ARROYO Arctander, June 23—The Ladies' Sooiety will give a "Missions Fest," at the West Lake church on Sunday afternoon, June 29, and there will also be services at 10:30 in the fore noon. Ice cream and other refresh ments will be served. Everybody welcome. Mr. and Mrs. Christ Olson from Sedan, are visiting with Hakon Nel son and friends this week. Many around here attended the Hatlestad-Henjum Wedding last Wednesday. Ckist Adams made a trip on his "Indian" last Tuesday to South Hav. en. Herman Edman is passing rapidly over the roads witE a new Buiek which he recently purchased-. Hakon Nelson took a trip to the cities last Thursday. Jofin Roisum from Willmar aalled at his home at Arctander last Sun day. The Mamre and Norway Lake nine played a successful game of base ball last Sunday, the former being to "7^1 1" The Sunday school children met at Hakon Nelson's Sunday Mr. apd Mrs. ©le Njos visited with Ed. Hauge Sunday. EAST D0VRE. East Dovre, June 23—Miss Mabel Sathre of Thief River Falls visited at M. Olson's and Andrew Berg's last week. Carroll Backhand returned last week from Bniluth and Poupore. Rev. and Mrs. Gynild and children, Ellen, Arne and Ragna of Fargo, N. D., arrived at Willmar Wednesday and are at present visiting with Arnt Gynild's of Arctander. Rev. Gynild has resigned from the pastorate at Fargo and wfll travel as a mission minister. His family will reside at their former home at Eagle Lake. Otto Nelson, Hattie Nelson and Mrs. Roebeck of Marinette, WU visited at Rev. Larson's last week. Magnus Olson left for Nevie, Minn., Monday to assist his brother Henry erect a residence. Flor^kicT Backhand visited friends at New London, from Thursday until Saturday. Mr. Peterson of Willmar. has fin ished the basement of the Eagle Lake* church and C. A. Backhand went to Minneapolis Tuesday morning to see about the mill work f6r the ehureh. "Missions Fest" will be held at An drew Berg's tbe 4th of July. Come all and spend a pheasant 4th. Hot dinner, ice cream, strawberries, letn onade, etc., will fie served. Rev. Larson and daughter, Cas para returned from Maynard, Minn., Monday, after attending a three days' meeting in Rev. Mortenson's congregation. Gilbert Guttormsen has finished the pump house at the Orphan's Home. Students Konsterlie and Larson-H are teaching the parochial school^ here. 7^ Rev. O. Dahle of StarbucB, Minn.,^ visited friends around here last week. business among you (the people of Kandiyohi County) warrants in claiming that we can offer you an abso lutely safe storehouse for your money. Checks on us are accepted in payment of bills at par in any part of Minnesota. Ninety per cent of the successful business men are Bank Depositors., .What better time than now to open a Check Account with us? We have unexcelled facilities for trans acting all branches of banking., ,, 5- -. ^^ffm^, I Our Officers will be glad to extend to you every courtesy -consistent with sound banking. We will keep your valuables in ourfire-proofvault free of charge. We shall be pleased to have you call on us. ^vh^':^&*Z&&R&^3%&& BANKS! OFIJWILiMAR -... Ay: Capital, Surplus and UedlwMei^ProHU.-^llQ.OOO.OO^^^^ President „,..• Vlee-Pi».,^^g^^C»rtitar -••£& *g£v* Aee't C«*hler||g --^a **. *i-^ *^Cr «5f A 33§