Newspaper Page Text
tM ''Jit Children's Faces —coarse, alkali containing soaps are bad for them! You want your kiddies to have good complex ions—always. Use JAPROSE "The Bubble Bath" SOAP it is pure—it con tains pure glycer ine—healing and soothing. You can buy fan cier packages—and get less soap value you can buy more penetrating odor— and less refinement. But you can't buy a bath and toilet soap so good to the skin. Sold by every pro gressive merchant throughout America at 10c the large bar. Try it—we vouch for your delightment and complete satis faction. James S. Kirk & Co. Chicago The Dear Old Jokes. A popular humorist on his deathbed called his son to him and said: "My son, I can't leave you any mon ey for my money 1 spent as fast as it came in. I can't leave you any fame, for fame cannot be shared. But there's an heirloom 1 can and will leave you, an heirloom banded down from my great-grandfather to my father and thence to me. and this heirloom, prop erly utilized, will keep you in affluence and honor, my son. even as it has kept me and my forbears these many gen erations." So saying, the humorist placed in the young man's hands a worm eaten and dog eared copy of "Joe Miller's Joke Book" and passed quietly away. If You Intend to Build or Remodel Your House-Have E. NiNELSON 518 Second Street Figure on It BUILDING BLOCKS, PORTLAND CE HENT PLASTER CEMENT and LIME, FOR SALE. NOTICE! Parties wishing' ice for pri vate or family use, not start ing before July 1st, 1913, will have, to pay $3.00 for 16 de liveries of 30 to 45 pounds a 1' W SMITH,! ENVOY ARRIVES IN MEXICO CITY John Und Will Study Situation Carefully. KEEPING HIS PLANS SECRET President Doe* Not Consider Time Op* portune for Making Tubllc His Course of Action. Washington, Aug. 11.—With the ar rival in Mexico City of John Lind, per sonal representative of President Wil son, administration officials declared that no further steps would be taken in carrying out the policy of the United States toward Mexico until Mr. Lind had made a careful study of. the general situation. While the president has mapped out a distinct course of action, about which strict secrecy is being main tained, it is known that the instruc tions to be sent Mr. Lind from time to time will depend largely on develop ments in the Mexican capital in the next few weeks. Mr. Lind will make all his recom mendations to Charge O'Shaughnessy, so that whatever representations are transmitted by the latter to the Huer ta government will differ in no way from the notes the American govern ment has hitherto advocated to the de facto authorities in the Mexican capi tal. Mr. Lind's connection with them, it was stated, would not be apparent. Further enlightment as to the er rand of Mr. Lind and the policy the president has formed came from Sena tor Bacon, chairman of the senate committee on foreign relations, who declared President Wilson had the hearty support of members of the senate generally, regardless of party lines. Senator Bacon's Statement. Concerning the conference between the president and the foreign relations committee Senator Bacon made the following statement: "The foreign relations committee recognizes that the president is try ing to solve this problem peacefully. With that general purpose the com mittee is in accord. They recognize that he wishes to settle the question without violence and for the best in terests-of the United States and of Mexico. "Of course, he cannot now be ex pected to go into details. In the first place some of the details are not worked out and depend in a measure on developments. "In the second place some matters of detail, if given out in advance in the present delicate situation, would defeat the very end sought to be ac complished. "One of the principal objects of Mr. Lind's mission is to get information from a capable and reliable man who has not been identified with either fac tion in this controversy and upon such information future action in a measure will naturally be based. Some Favor Drastic Action. "There are some divergences of opinion in the committee. It could not be otherwise. Some few favor more drastic measures than others. The committee generally sympathizes with the president's desire to avoid intervention or anything that will pro duce war. "Even those, however, who favor drastic measures have confidence in the president and are supporting him in his present efforts. I think, with:a few exceptions, thsere is no disposi tion to draw party lines. "While there is a small element in this country that would like to see war the large majority of the people deprecate it most earnestly and thor oughly sympathize with the desire or the president to avoid it. "There is no secrecy on the part of the president as to the general pur poses he has in view and the general methods he is trying to employ. "There never was a greater respon sibility on a man than now rests upon the president to guard this country against being involved in war on ac count of Mexico and 1 believe that it is the duty of every man who has confidence in the integrity and ca pacity of the president to hold up his hands in the effort he is making and to do as little as possible to embar rass him in working out successfully the difficult undertaking." LIND IS IN MEXICO CITY President Wilson's Special Envoy at His Journey's End. Washington, Aug. 11.—John Lind, special representative of President Wilson to Investigate the Mexican situation, arrived safely in Mexico City, according to advices received at the state department from Charge O'Shaughnessy of the United States embassy in Mexico City. Mr. Lind was accompanied by his wife and Dr. William Bayard Hale, who has been In Mexico for some time studying conditions in Mexico on be half of President Wilson. THREE PIE IN ALBERTA FIRE Warming Food Causes Death of Par. mer, Wife and Child. Winnipeg, Aug. 8.—Three people were burned to death in a farmhouse near Strathmore, Alta. The dead are* W. Gillingweter, twenty-eight years old, his wife and their Infant child. Gillinweter was chief clerk in the Canadian Pacific railway irrigation de partment at Strathmore. He recently started farming northwest of town. The fire was caused by an oil stove which was burning in the bedroom to warm food for the baby. JOHN LIND. Mlnnesotan Goes to Mexico, to Try and End Rebellion. MIKADO RECEIVES GUTHRIE Strong Ties Uniting Japan and United States Voiced. Tokio, Japan, Aug. 8.—The strong ties uniting the Japanese empire and the United States were mutually voiced by the emperor of Japan and George W. Guthrie, the new Amer ican ambassador. The ambassador presented his ere dentials and conveyed the greetings of President Wilson to the emperor. A regiment of Japanese cavalry es corted him to the imperial palace and he rode in an imperial coach. The crowds along the route respect fully uncovered as he passed. SECON BALKA N CONFLICT ENDS Delegates Agree Upon Terms to Conclude Peace. Bucharest, Aug. 7.—Peace has been concluded between the Balkan states, and the preliminary treaty will be signed by the delegates of Servia, Greece, Montenegro, Roumania and Bulgaria. The agreement was arrived at only after another exhibition of the utter helplessness of Bulgaria to face her ring of enemies. On Wednesday the discussions in the peace conference threatened to become interminable, but M. Majeres co, the Roumanian premier, president of the conference, clinched matters by threatening that unless Bulgaria accepted the modified frontier pro posed by the allies Roumania's army would occupy Sofia next Saturday. This threat had the desired effect. The new frontier, as agreed to, starts at a point on the old frontier west of the Struma river, follows the watershed to west of the town of Strumnitza, thence runs almost through the Struma valley to the Belesch mountains, and thence east erly in almost a straight line to the Mesta river, thus leaving the town of Strumnitza, the port of Lagos and Kanthi to Bulgaria and the port of Kavala to Greece. CALUMET STRIKE IS BROKEN Two Thousand Men at Work in Cop per Mines. Calumet, Mich., Aug. 10.—Copper mine operators claim the complete rout of the Western Federation of Miners in its strike here for higher wages, an eight-hour day, abolishing of the one-man drill and recognition of the union. Two thousand men are at work. No demands for changes in working con ditions were made by the men return ing, but it is said, from a high au thority, that the mining companies will raise the wage scale and prob ably give the men the eight-hour day shortly after the strike finally Is set tled. NINE LABORERS ARE KILLED Speeding Motor Vehicle Collides With Freight Train. Poughkeepsie, N. Y., Aug. 9.—Speed ing forty miles an hour a motor hand car laden with track laborers crashed into a freight train on the Central of New England railroad near Pleasant Valley. Pour were killed outright and five were mortally injured. Added to Holocaust Victims. Binghamton, N. Y., Aug. 10.—The thirty-second name was added to the list of those who perished in the fire which destroyed the Binghamton Clothing company's plant two weeks ago when Mrs. May Layton died at the city hospital from injuries re ceived in jumping from the fourth floor of the burning building. HORSEWHIP PRISON DOCTOR British Suffragettes Attack Medical Officer of Holloway Jail. London, Aug. 10.—Four suffragettes attacked Dr. Pearson, the medical officer of Holloway jail, and beat him severely with a horsewhip. The women told the doctor that their treatment was a protest against his recently voiced threat to hold hun ger strikers in prfson until they be came mental wrecks. Policemen rescued Or. Pearson and the women ran away. DOUBTFUL WHEN BILL WILL PASS if Senate May Not Act on Tariff Measure Before Sept. IS. LITTLE PROGRESS SO FAR Only Four Schedules Taken Up So Far and Portions of These Have Been Passed Over. Washington, Aug. 9.—All predic tlonsof an early passage of the Demo cratic tariff bill by the senate are going glimmering. Majority leaders realize only a be ginning has been made and the ear liest any one now will promise com pletion of the task is Sept. 15. Ten days ago when a member of the finance committee said he thought the senate would pass the bill by Aug. 20 there were some who thought it might be possible, but that date is less than two weeks away and but four schedules have been covered, thirty-six paragraphs in these having been passed over for future consider ation. Now even those who suggest Sept. 15 as the date for final action are guided principally by hopes and do not share the views of others that it will be a later date before the final vote. The death of Senator Johnston of Alabama has reduced the Democratic majority on the bill to one vote, the Louisiana senators having determined to vote against it because of the free sugar provision. This slender majority has given rise to hopes in Republican breasts that they may be able to put through an amendment to the wool or sugar schedules. COLONEL S. F. CODY KILLED Aviator and Passenger Meet Death When Machine Falls. Aldershot, Eng., Aug. 8.—Colonel S. F. Cody, one of the best known avia tors in England, and a pasenger named Evans were killed when Cody's monoplane turned turtle near here and buried both men under it when it crashed to earth. Cody's neck was broken in the fall. His sons, Leon and Frank, were eye witnesses of the accident, which was attributed by experts to faulty con struction, the body of the craft prov ing too heavy for the wings. Cody was an American by birth, but became a naturalized Englishman sev eral years ago. Evans was a member of the Indian civil service who had obtained leave of absence to come to England to study aviation. CAR SHORTAGE IS PROBABLE Situation Likely to Become Acute by October. Chicago, Aug. 10.—Indications of a car shortage this fall is seen in a bul letin issued by the American Railway association. It discloses that on Aug. 1 there were 68,716 surplus cars on various lines throughout the country, as compared with a surplus of 76,280 on July 15. It is regarded that this surplus will continue to decrease un til the situation becomes acute in Oc tober. There were 65,904 idle cars in the United States on Aug. 1 last year, and a car shortage of unusual severity oc curred as soon as the crop movement began. A Pony Sentinel. During one of General Custer's In dian campaigns he had a boy bugler with him who was mounted on a cir cus pony he had picked up somewhere. The animal was not only full of tricks, but be proved himself a better sentinel than any of the soldiers. Three times in four months be saved the camp from a night attack when no other suspected that danger was near. Upon one occasion the pony, who was loose and walking about camp, discovered a sentinel asleep on his post. That was wrong, and the animal knew it was, and he gave the soldier such a bite on the arm as caused him to yell out and arouse the whole camp. Pony and boy both died in Custer's last battle. Mad Dogs. Mad dogs do not attack people. "When a dog has the rabies," said a physician, "he has lost control of his body, and what he does is mechanical. His jaws snap involuntarily, and if he encounters any object whether ani mate or inanimate, he is likely to bite it. But a mad dog does not attack as does an angry dog. He does not pick out a victim or use any strategy. For this reason dogs suffering from rabies are less dangerous than is supposed. No grown person need fear them, for all he has to do is to get out of the way. The dog will not cnase him. Of course, young children are in danger, as they do not know how to dodge the brute.** The Hohenzollern "White Lady." A Prussian royal wedding of four centuries ago gave rise to the tradition of the "white lady," the famous Ho henzollern ghost. The Burgrave Al bert loved a young widow of the bouse of Orlamunde, but once thoughtlessly remarked that their wedding would be "impossible until four eyes are out of the way." He'alluded to his uncle and brother, but she thought be meant her two little children, whom she accord ingly murdered with a knitting needle. The horrified Albert forsook her and married Sophia of Henueberg, where upon the erring widow went mad. died and ever since has haunted the, royal palaces in mourning garb with a white veil. "Keen Eyed Indians. An American Indian can see at least one-tenth farther than the average white man. JOSEPH F. JOHNSTON. Alabama Senator Dies at Washington of Pneumonia. SENATOR JOHNSTON IS DEAD Alabaman Passes Away at the Age of Seventy Years. Washington, Aug. 9.—Senator Jo seph F. Johnston of Alabama, one of the oldest members of the upper house, is dead of pneumonia. Senator Johnston was a Democrat and resided at Birmingham.' He was seventy years of age. His term would have expired March 3, 1915. The death of Senator Johnston weak ens the Democratic majority on the administration tariff bill in the sen ate, although leaders still assert that there will be no serious difficulty in passing the measure. TWO PERUVIAN CITIES IN RUINS Thousands Homeless As Result of Earthquake. Lima, Peru, Aug. 9.—News reached here that an earthquake destroyed the Peruvian towns of Caraveli and Qui cacha. Thousands of the inhabitants were rendered homeless and extended relief measures will be necessary. Caraveli is a city of 4,000 inhabitants in the state of Arequipa, 130 miles northeast of the port of Mollendo, Quicacha is a smaller town in the same state. The city of Arequipa itself has been laid in ruins on several occasions. The volcano of Misti is in the imme diate vicinity. SUFFRAGISTS PLANT BOMB Policeman Cuts Fuse and Saves High School From Destruction. London, Aug. 10.—A policeman who with his pocket knife cut the sputter ing fuse of a bomb, probably saved from destruction the high school at Suttin, Nottingham, where David Lloyd-George was scheduled to make an address. Militant suffragettes are suspected of placing the bomb. GRAIN AND PROVISION PRICES Duluth Wheat and Flax. Duluth, Aug. 11.—Wheat—On track and to arrive, No. 1 hard, 89c No. 1 Northern, 88c No. 2 Northern, 86@ 86%c Sept., 88%c Dec, 90%c. Flax —On track and to arrive, $1.43% Sept., $1.43% Oct., $1.43% Dec, 11.41. South St. Paul Live Stock. Couth St. Paul, Aug. 11.—Cattle Steers, $6.50@8.25 cows and heifers, $4.50@7.00 calves, $6.00@9.75 feed ers, $6.25@7.00. Hogs—$7.50@8.90. Sheep—Shorn lambs, $5.25@7.00 shorn wethers, $4.00@4.75 shorn ewes, $2.50@4.25. Chicago Grain and Provisions. Chicago, Aug. 11.—Wheat—Sept, 85%c Dec, 89%c. Corn—Sept.. 72%c Dec, 66%c. Oats—Sept., 41%c Dec, 43%c. Pork—Sept., $20.62 Jan., $19. 12. Butter—Creameries, .25%@'26%c. Eggs—14c Poultry—Hens, 14c springs, 17c turkeys, 19c. Chicago Live Stock. Chicago, Aug. 11.—Cattle—Beeves, $7.10@9.10 Texas steers, $6.75§7.80 Western steers," $6.25@7.65 stackers and feeders, $5.25@7.75 cows and heifers, $3.60@8.40 calves, $8.00@ 11.25. Hogs—$8.30@8.90 light, $8.90 @9.30 mixed, $8.10(5)9.25 heavy, $7.85@9.85 rough, "$7.85@8.00 pigs, $5.00@8.55. Sheep—Native, $4.10@ 5.10 yearlfngs, $5.35@6.15 lambs, $5.50g7.50. Minneapolis' Grain. Minneapolis, Aug. 11.—Wheat-^ Sept., 86%c Dec, 89%@89%c Cash close on track: No. 1 hard, 89%c No. 1 Northern, 87%@88%c to arrive, 87%c No. 2 Northern, 85%@87%c No. 3 Northern, 84%c No. 3 yellow corn, 76@77c No. 4 corn, 74® 75c No. 3 white oats, 39%@39%c to ar rive, 39%c No. 3 oats, 36@37%c barley, 45@61c flax, $1.42% to ar rive, $1.42%. SUMMER COLDS reduce human strenfth and illness it easily contracted, bat Scott'* Emulsion wiD promptlyrelim die cold anil upbuild year strength to prerent sickness. ft]pufly 8COTT ft BOWNB^J BLOOMFIELD. N. J. 1S-8S ABOUT THE STATE News of Especial Interest to Minnesota Readers. IN CLASH WITH OFFICERS Leaders of Ore Dock Strikers at Du- luth 8ustain Injuries—Strike breakers. Put to Work. The first blood of the strike of ore dock workers at Duluth was shed on the main street of that city when Leader Cannon of the Industrial Workers of the World and one of his aids clashed with Oliver Mining com pany policemen, following a controver sy regarding an open air meeting. The aid suffered a deep scalp wound and Cannon was battered and bruised. More than 150 strikebreakers are now at work. They loaded 15,000 tons of ore on the night shift. The head of the Duluth, Missabe and Northern said the situation on the ranges is satisfactory and that loading of cars continues. The Great Northern railroad is constructing enough portable shacks on the Allouez ore docks at Su perior to accommodate 400 strike breakers. Two hundred and twenty five strikebreakers have arrived in a special train of seven coaches. A heavy guard will be maintained at the camp night and day. The Great Northern now has 100 deputies work ing. They are paid $4 a day and board. The committee of citizens has aban doned all efforts at intervening, hav ing been discouraged by the unrecep tlve mood of the strikers. The Great Northern road, carrying out its promises to reduce the element of risk, has set a crew of men at work covering the openings under in side tracks with planks. APPLY TORCH TO BUILDINGS Incendiaries and Robbers Busy at Virginia. Incendiaries and robbers made a trip across the city of Virginia and set tire to Mesburg & Lavick's furniture store, with flats above to the State bank, to the Duluth, Missabe and Northern depot and to Andrew Grande's ware house. The Mesburg block was gutted and occupants of three apartments had narrow escapes, having to grope their way out through smoke in their night clothes. The fires are all known to be of in cendiary origin and were reported at intervals of about twenty minutes. At all the places there were oil saturated clothes and paper and attempts were made in every case to break into drawers and open safes. Entrance was effected in each case through ia window. At the bank a small amount in cash and stamps was obtained. The robbers by mistake locked the safe at Mesburg's store, not knowing it was open. The police received a fake call to a distant part of the city when the gang was ready to operate. One man was seen to be lighting the oiled clothing at the Grande warehouse. CONGRESSMAN IS A BENEDICT Clarence B. Miller of Duluth Marries Washington Woman. Congressman Clarence B. Miller of Duluth and his bride are spending their honeymoon at Los Angeles. Their quiet wedding came as the culmina tion of a romance that had its incep tion in the national capital, where the congressman while attending to his legislative duties also laid siege to the heart of Miss Gertrude V. Pattison, a niece of former Surgeon General George Sternberg. It was to avoid ostentatious display and the curious eyes of a host of friends that the couple met in Los Angeles to speak the words that made them husband and wife. The cere mony was performed without any at tendants. BEMIDJI P0ST0FFICE ARREST Trusted Employe Charged Wjth Tak ing Money. Edward Gould, a trusted employe of the Bemidji postoffice, was arrested by Deputy United States Marshal Tufts of Crookston on the charge of em bezzlement, it being claimed he open ed a registered letter and appropriated money. He':was arraigned before Marshal Simmons and his bail placed at $2,500, pending a preliminary hear ing.. Gould worked nights and it is claim ed that he had been rifling letters. A trap was laid, the usual decoy let ter containing marked money being used. LINDBERGH MONEY BILL IN Introduces Substitute Measure in the House. Another currency bill has been in troduced in the lower house of con gress by Representative Lindbergh of Minnesota, Progressive member of the hanking and currency committee. The bill contemplates the use of bank reserves to meet extraordinary demands in time of financial stress and the substitution of emergency cur rency for the reserves. ST. PAUL GETS CONVENTION Knights of Columbus to Meet There in 1914., .. James 6'Plaherty of Philadelphia was re-elected supreme knight and Marston H. Carmody, Grand Rapids, Mich., was returned to his office of deputy supreme knight at the election of officers in the thirty-first national convention of the Knights of Colum bus at Boston. *St. Paul-was chosen as the city for the 1914 convention. AGED NORSE EDITOR DEAD Gudmund F. Johnson Was Founder of Budstikken: Gudmund F. Johnson, founder of Budstikken, the leading Norwegian newspaper of the country during the early days of Minneapolis, is dead at the family home at Spring Park, Lake Mlnnetonka. Mr. Johnson died after a lingering illness. Mr. Johnson was born, in Skien, Norway, sixty-nine years ago. He moved to Minneapolis forty-five years ago and in 1873 began the publica tion of Budstikken. He continued the publication until 1889, when the Min neapolis Daily Tidende purchased it and later consolidated it with the Tidende. He then founded the Nor manna, another weekly paper, but sus pended publication after a few years. He was for a time employed in the United States customs department and was widely known in the Middle West AGREES TO TWO-CENT RATE Chicago Great Western Joins Other Roads in Cut. The Chicago Great Western railroad will establish a 2-cent passenger rate, but will not make any refunds for overcharges while the 3-cent rate was in effect. This statement was issued by the state railroad and warehouse com mission, following a conference with officials of the road and L. A. Smith, attorney general. No agreement was reached as to a reduction in the freight rates, .as the reasonableness of these rates will be a matter to be determined by the fed eral court at a hearing scheduled for Aug. 25. The new passenger rate will be put into effect as soon as sched ules can be filed with the commis sion, which is expected to be in about ten days. MINNESOTA CITIES WILL SECUR E FUNDS Federal Cash for St. Paul, Minneapolis and Duluth. Minnesota's share of the $50,000,000 or more to be apportioned by Secre tary McAdoo to the various states to help move the crops will be confined to the banks of St. Paul, Minneapolis and Duluth. This is the information made public by W. B. Geery of St. Paul, who was one of the four Minnesota financiers attending the conference of Western bankers with Assistant Secretary Will iams of the treasury. The exact amount the banks will have is not known and will not be de termined until some later time. SWITCH ENGINE HITS AUTO One Woman Killed and Several Per sons Injured. One woman was killed and another woman, a man, a boy and a girl were Injured at Tracy when a switch en gine struck an automobile on the main crossing of the Northwestern road. The occupants of the car were Mr. and Mrs. Tom Conners and daughter of Seaforth, Minn., and Mrs. Wallace Comstock and son of Minneapolis. Mrs. Conners was killed instantly, her body being cut in two by the wheels of the engine. Mrs. Comstock was injured seriously and may die. Her son, Charles Comstock, sixteen years old, is unconscious and is se verely injured. LIND WILL DECLINE POST Has No Desire to Become Ambassador to Mexico. John Lind of Minnesota, President Wilson's personal representative, en route to Mexico, said at New Orleans that he would not, under any circum sta'nees, accept the ambassadorship to Mexico. Mr. Lind said that after he had ac complished what he expected to in the southern republic he would not accept a permanent post there. Gives Life to Save Child. Mrs. Phoebe Sterns, who lived south west of Fergus Falls, went to the res cue of her granddaughter, aged nine years, when a spark from a stove in which corncobs were being burned ignited the child's dress in the home of Mrs. Stern's daughter, Mrs. Charles Snyder. She saved the little girl, but her own clothing took fire- and she died some Jjours later from the shock of her Injuries. Titanic Lookout Is Dead. London, Aug. 10.—Reginald Lee, one of the two sailors in the lookout when the White Star liner Titanic met in disastrous collision with an iceberg a year ago last April, is dead at South ampton. CAPTUREANIMP0RTANTT0WN Constitutionalists Win Victory After Two Days' Fighting. -Mexico City, Aug. 10.—The Consti tutionalists captured Agua Calientes after two days of desperate fighting, according to reports that reached the capital. Rebel forces under five reb el leaders combined and they are said to have suffered heavy losses, but were constantly reinforced. 8tockw*ll's Ghost Story. Stockwell was at one time famous for Its ghost, which set all London in an uproar in 1772. Making the furni ture dance and the crockery fall was the ghost's specialty, though by way of variety an egg once flew across the room and hit'the cat Having excited London and frightened Stockwell. the ghost retired, leaving behind a firm be lief in his supernatural origin, until many years later a servant admitted that long horsehairs attached to the crockery and wires to the .furniture had enabled her to play the 'ghost so successfully that frightened beholders never even detected such open' feats as throwing the'egg at the cat-Lon aon Answers. „,,v -?xv A* *k.r' LETS GO!!! MINNESOTA STATE FAIR EXPOSITION SEPT. I-6, 19I3 THl A Cheyenne Frontier Day. Celebration Trainlond iinrripion Hr Ridt-rv K.IJILIS, liuckiriK Brom'hos. Hunnlov Hull Holders. I ncliiins. etc rough liom I lain ens Capital o' the Cuw Country K»H THf. MINNESOTA STATE FAIR Night Show Every Evening in front of the Grand Stand VUM can see thi Greatest Historrcal Representa tion of reul life on the Frontier in a Frontier Davs Setting and concluded by a rna^nificeni displav FIREWORKS One Feature Qi The World's Greatest State Fair. Hamlme, Minn., Sept. 1-6, 1913 MEN WHO ABE RESPONSIBLE Everybody knows that the world'a greatest state fair is held annually on the Minnesota State Fair grounds at Hamline, Minn. There are many rea sons why this Is the greatest state fair in the world. One o£ them is the character of the officers and board of managers. It is a matter of general interest therefore, to know who are responsible for the success or fail ure of the 1913 exposition. A list of the officers and managers follows: President, J. J. Furlong, Austin first vice president, E. J. Stilwell, Min neapolis second vice president, E. 3. Warner, St. Paul secretary, J. C. Simpson, Hamline asst. secretary, M, E. Harrison, Hamline treasurer, A. H. Turrittin, Sauk Rapids. Board oi managers: George Atchison, Man* kato W. W. Sivright, Hutchinson Robert Crickmore, Owatonna C. P. Craig, Duluth F. W. Murphy, Wheat on Thos. H. Canfield, Lake Park. A Puzzling Answer. "Have you sold all those stockings?" "No. I have them still on my hands." —Lippincott's. Jelly Roll Recipe Only Two Eggs Required By Mrs. Janet McKenzie Hilli Editor of the Boston Cooking School Magazine This Jelly Roll is fast becoming very popular on account of the way it keepa fresh. With proper handling it should keep fresh a whole week, providing it Isn't eaten up in the meantime, for it is every bit as good as it looks. 33 EC Jelly Roll One cup sifted flour scant half tea Spoonful salt 2 level teaspoonfuls ^,---5 Baking Powder grated rind of 1 "*-i lemon/ 2 eggs beaten light 1 cuf sugar S£ cup hot milk glass of jelly pow dered sugar. Beat the sugar into the eggs add the lemon rind, then the flour, sifted three times with the salt and baking powder and, lastly, the milk. Bake in a but tered dripping pan turn out ona damp doth, trim off the crisp edges spread with jelly and turn over and over into %%&£ a roll while still warm. Dredge the top with powdered sugar. Hot milk used in the jelly roll en- ^, ables it to be rolled without danger of ^^.^ cracking. Have the milk scaldinghot, y^V^T also be careful to have the eggs and ^,"^ sugar beaten together until very light $£-:.„, and creamy. Bake in a moderate oven. ^-i Jelly Roll illustrated on page thirty-two of the new and handsomely -v? illustrated 64-page Cook's Book, .* which may be secured free by sending the certificate packed in every 25-cent can of Baking Powder to the jAfiues M*e% Co., Chicago, HI. The Minneapolis Dollar-Hotel 200 MODERN ROOMS ^tofUJ fa H-rt el Barf-» Phgfct $1.2° S I N E RATE 91«°* EUflOPiAN BAT* ton TWO KRSONS S4.eo PRIVATE BATH AND TOIIXT EXTH* COMPLETE SAFETY AUTOMATIC SPRINKLERS AND FIREPROOF CONSTRUCTION (INSURANCE RECORDS SHOW NO unmf BVER 10«T IN A •PRINKLEO •UlLDtNO.) V. EVERY ROOM HAS HOT AND COLD RUNNINR WATER, STEAM HEAT. OAR AND ELECTRIC LHMTR, AND TELEPHONE SERVICE. •EVEN RTORT ANNEX IN CONNECTNN. *& -*-3& tia