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3 T~ WAL SAMUEL G. IVERSON. State Auditor Is Candidate for Governor of Minnesota. IVERSON OUT FOR GOVERNOR "Economy and Law Enforcement" His Policy. Samuel G. Iverson, serving his third term as state auditor, has announced his candidacy for governor on the Re publican ticket. "Economy and Law Enforcement" are the paramount is« sues upon which he will wage his fight. The "invisible government," Mr. Iverson declares, should be dragged from hiding and stripped of its power and public business should be done in the open. "We need a rousing revival of old fashioned economy," said Mr.. Iverson, and he outlines what he means by "intelligent economy." He also charges laxity in law enforcement to the gov- H4 Home Adornment bad its first expression in wall hangings which consisted of skins and other trophies of the chase. Modern home decoration is best expressed by Alfred Pea "Prise" Wall Paper. Samples from this well known, reliable house, will be brought to your home, for inspection in the rooms to be papered, the only satisfactory way to make a selection. Estimates cheerfully furnished. LARGE ASSORTMENT POPULAR PRICES TEDDY JORGENSON PAINTING and DECORATING 203 Third St. 'Phone 157 Willmar, Minn. acres and the cents a pound. ernor and other law enforcing officer.-*' apoplexy in his room at the Marlbor and calls for .enforcement of the laws °"Sh apartments in St. Paul. Mr. as to the liquor traffic and the unlaw- Fosnes was born in Norway in March, ful trusts, especially. Mr. Iverson does not discuss public Simultaneously with the announce-' ment of Mr. Iverson a statement was issued from Governor Eberhart's of fice announcing the appointment of a special commission to study the state government for the purpose of recom mending a reorganization of the vari ous departments to secure greater ef ficiency and enforce economy. FARMERS TO RAISE ALFALFA Business Men Will Aid Otter Tail County Growers in Getting Start. A movement is on foot at Fergus Falls to interest the farmers of Otter Tail county in raising alfalfa. The plan under way is to have twenty leading business men of the county sign a guarantee for $2,500 and with this sum of money send an agent to some locality where good, acclimated seed can be obtained. This seed wiU be sold at cost to farmers. Several business men have already signed the guarantee and no difficulty is expected in securing the necessary signatures. A bushel of alfalfa will seed four seed costs about 15 FATAL OLD COUNTRY FEUD Two Assyrian Brothers Kill Country man at Duluth. Two pistol duels, in which more than a score of shots were fired, oc curred at Duluth and resulted in the death of one man and the woundina of Police Captain A. G. Fiskett. George Azary is the dead man anJ Abraham Hadded is held as his slay er. Joseph Hadded, a brother, who was one of the principals in the fusil lade, escaped. The men, all Assyrians, are known to have been involved in a feud dat ing back to the old country for several years. TAKES POISON FOR BRANDY Farmer Near Caledonia Dies From Liquid Swallowed in Dark. Joseph McKenna, fifty years old, a well to do farmer residing near Cale donia, had cramps during, the night and going into the pantry without troubling to turn on the light reached for the brandy bottle. He took one swallow, then realized that he had taken a deadly poison by mistake and cried for help. Physicians were called quickly, but the man died before they arrived. FALL FROM ORE BOAT FATAL Sailor Is Drowned While Working on Vessel at Duluth. Falling from Missabe ore dock No. 3 at Duluth, where he was assisting in loading an ore boat, Vincent Pen pinsky, twenty-seven years of age, a sailor and single, was drowned The body was recovered with grap pling irons. Mill City Postal Official Dead. Martin C. Fosnes, assistant postmas ter at Minneapolis, died suddenly of 1851» a a 0 is niB utilities regulation, but says: "We old. He lived near Winona up to twen need fewer boards and commissions! ty-five years ago, when he entered the not more." postal service. country with Parents when he was seven years Sure. Sunday School Teacher—Tommy, can you tejl "ie wbut caused tb» flood? Small Tommy-Ws. ma'am. It raiued. (First publication Oct. 1, 1913-4t) Order Xilmltinff Time to File Claims, and for Hearing1 Thereon. Estate of Andrew Danielson. State of Minnesota, County of Kandi yohi, In Probate Court. In the Matter of the Estate of Andrew Danielson, Decedent. 'Letters of Administration this da} having been granted to K. T. Rykken of said county. It Is Ordered, that the time within which all creditors of the above named decedent may present claims against his estate in this court, be, and the same hereby is, limited to six months from and after the date hereof and that Monday, the 6th day of April, 1914 at 2 o'clock p. m„ in the Probate Court Rooms at the Court House at Willmai in said County, be, and the same hereby is, fixed and appointed as the time and place for hearing upon and the examin ation, adjustment and allowance of such claims as shall be presented within the time aforesaid. Let notice hereof be given by the publication of this order in the Willmar Tribune as provided by law. Dated September 24th, 1913. (SEAL) T. O. GILBERT. Judge of Probate GEO. H. OTTERNESS. Attorney Wlllmnr. Minn. A CIO Alt OF MERIT I The Elsa Gigar, as good as ever mm *c' ON FINAL TRIAL TRIP Admiralty Commissioners and All Save One on Board Meet instant Death. Berlin, Oct. 18.—The new naval Zeppelin airship L-2 exploded in the air near Johannisthal and was com pletely wrecked. Twenty-seven persons were aboard and all but one were instantly killed. The party included the entire admiralty trial board, headed by Commander Benisch, conducting the final trials prior to the acceptance as part of the new German aerial navy. Lieutenant Baron von Bleul of the Queen Augusta Grenadier guards, who was making the.trip as a guest, was alive when picked up, but died in a short time. Many of the bodies were so badly burned and mangled as to be unrec ognizable. The L-2 was the latest of the aerial war craft built by the Zeppelin com pany for the German navy and was en her trial trip. Flames were seen to envelop the craft from stem to stern before those on the ground heard the detonation and then the air ship crashed to earth. The Zeppelin L-2 was the only re maining aerial cruiser of the German navy. She was the last dirigible built. Accident lost two other naval Zeppelins with great loss of life shortly after being completed and put in commission. Explosion Follows Flames. The L-2 was flying 900 feet over the aviation field when fire enveloped the great gas bag. It was only a short space of time before the spec tators heard the terrific detonation and knew that an explosion had been caused by the fire. The monster bal loon plunged earthward like a blazing meteor and the spectators scattered in all 'directions to save themselves from the deluge of fire which came from her. This was the sixth of the air craft built by the aged Count Zeppelin, pio neer of German aviation, that has come to grief, but only the last three accidents were attended with loss of life. The admiralty commission was made up of Captain Benisch, Lieu tenant Commander Freyer, naval offi cers Naval Architects Neumann and Pietzker and Naval Engineer Buschl They were all killed instantly. Lieutenant Commander Freyer was in comand of the dirigible. He was formerly an aide-de-camp to Prince Albert, third son of the kaiser. I SPECIAL TROOP TRAIN WRECKED Twenty Soldiers Killed and Five Score Injured. Meridian, Miss., Oct. 20.—Twenty soldiers of the Thirty-ninth and Sev enteenth coast artillery were killed and about one hundred others injured when a special troop train on the Mo bile and Ohio railroad crashed through a trestle near State Line, Miss. W V? fe* German War Craft if Division Superintendent Pegeford of the Mobile and Ohio, in a report sent to headquarters of the road at Mobile, gives this number as the extent of the casualties.- The wreck was caused by the engine tender jumping the track.when about 200 feet from a trestle. The engine was not derailed and passed over th? trestle.} *A••:!.-. 4--:/l The tender broke loose from the en gine, however, and with the baggage car and three coaches plunged twenty five feet to the ground. Sixteen bodies have been taken from the wreckage and Superintendent Pegeford said he was sure four more bodies were in the debris. One hundred and seventy-nine sol diers were on the special train. TWO ARE BURNED TO DEATH Another Person Missing Following Chicago Fire. Chicago, Oct. 19.—Two persons were cremated, a third is missing and four families narrowly escaped death in a fire that destroyed a two-story room ing house. Mrs. Emma Anderson, a widow liv ing on the second floor, and James Wilson, owner of a second hand fur niture store on the ground floor, are) the known victims. PASSES BURNING VOLTURNO Blazing Hull Sighted by Steamer St, Louis. New York, Oct. 19.—The ill starred Volturno still was afloat and on fire on Oct. 14, five days after .flames broke out in her forward compart:." ments, according to officers of, the' steamer St. Louis, which has reached here. The St. Louis passed five miles north of what was left of the Voltur-^ no late Tuesday^ afternoon. The vessel had drifted about forty'miles from the spot where she' caught fire. MRS.PANKHURST. United 8tates Officials Order, Militant Leader .Deported. by American Pr#»«« v$Kori-4.ttnn MRS. PANKHURST ORDERED DEPORTED W1UMAR TRIBUHt WEOMISDAV, OCTOBER & ,Ut3, i.' .? *$ Mrs. Pankhurst's deportation was ordered under section 2 of the immi gration law. This section provides for the exclusion of persons'. convict ed abroad of a crime or crimes in volving moral turpitude.. The board held that Mrs. Pankhurst's conviction in England of conspiracy to commit arson brought her within this class. CONFESSES KILLING WIFE Husband Denies Jealousy Was Motive for Crime. 1 Chicago, Oct. 18.—William C. Ellis, the Cincinnati leather merchant who was found in a Chicago hotel room where lay the body of his wife, cW fesed to a coroner's jury that he had killed the woman and was held to the ffJZ Not Permitted to Land on, Reaching New York. New York, Oct. 19.—Mrs. Emmeline Pankhurst, the English militant suf fragette leader, who arrived here for a lecture tour, was ordered deported by the immigration authorities within a little less than three hours after the vessel upon which she came had docked. -"'•:',•/ The special board of inquiry which decided her case voted not to admit her to the country under bond but to send her back to France forthwith. Mrs. Pankhurst's lawyer, Herbert Reeves, announced his intention of ap pealing the case immediately to Com missioner General Caminetti. Pending decision by Mr. Caminetti Mr. Reeves said he would seek to have his dlient admitted to this country un der bond. Mrs. O. H. P. Belmont, the New York suffrage leader, who was to have been Mrs. Pankhurst's host, was pre in America. Under the ruling of the special board she will not be permitted to do so and Mrs. Pankhurst must remain at Ellis Island until deported unless the board's findings are revers authorities at Washington, & grand jury, charged with murder* Ellis himself was wounded when Tammany leader would be ruled out. found. After a conference with mem bers of his wife's family Ellis aban doned his assertion, made at first to the police, that the tragedy was the result of a suicide pact. He assumed the entire blame for the killing and devoted his statement to obliterating the impression, given ir. his first interview with the police, that jealousy was the cause of crime. BALAKLAVA SURVIVOR DEAD Charge of Light Brigade. London, Oct. 18.—Sir George Orby Wombwell, the last of the officers who took part in the charge of the Light Brigade at the battle of dalaklava, in October, 1854, died here at the age of eighty-one years. He was a lieutenant in the Seventeenth Lancers during the Crimean war. In the course of the famous charge two horses were killed under him. £*K! IS OUSTED Sulzer Removed by Vote of 43 to 12. DROPS FOUfURTICLES High Court Unanimously Rules Out Last Half of the Charges. Albany, N. Y., Oct. 18.—William Sulzer is no longer governor of the state of New York. The high court of impeachment, by a vote of 43 to 32, has removed him from office. Senator Wende and Judge Cullen ex cused themselves from voting. The proposal to disqualify Sulzer from ever again holding a place of honor or trust in the state was voted down unanimously with the exception that Judge Cullen again did not vote. Prior to the vote on his disqualifi cation and removal the last four ar ticles of the impeachment charges, 6 6, 7 and 8, unanimously were voted out. Martin H. Glynn of Albany, the acting governor, became governor. Robert P. Wagner of New York, ma jority leader of the senate, became lieutenant governor. The vote on articles 1 and 2 was 39 to 18, a bare two-thirds majority. The former article charges that the governor falsified his statement of campaign contributions, the latter that he committed perjury In so doing. The vote on article 3 which charges the governor bribed witnesses to with hold testimony from the Frawley in vestigating committee, was unanimous in favOr of the governor. The vote on article 4 was 43 to 14, six members changing their votes on articles 1 and 2 from "not guilty" to "guilty" and two from "guilty" to "not guilty." This article charges that the governor suppressed evidence by means of threats to keep witnesses from testifying. Among those was Duncon W. Peck, state superintendent of public works, who testified that th« governor had asked him to commit perjury. pared to give a bond up to $100,000 for TRIAL A POLITICAL LYNCHING Mrs. Pankhurst's good behavior while _.— Deposed Governor of New York Flays Tammany Chief. Albany, N. Y,, Oct 18.—William Sui ter, deposed governor of New York, issued a statement in which he de- by^ the dared he hid been removed by "Mur phy's high court ^f infamy." "Murphy controlled the assembly and ordered the impeachment," he Baid. "He controlled most of the mem bers of the court and dictated proced ure and wrote the'judgment. He was the judge and jury the prosecutor and the bailiff." Sulzer declared that his trial was a "political lynching as far as the Tam pianyized part of the court was con cerned—the confirmation of a deep laid political conspiracy to oust me from office." Mr. Sulzer's long awaited statement characterized the secret sessions of the court as "star chamber proceed ings, where the enemies of the state could work for my conviction undis covered." He asserted he had not taken the stand in his own defense because he realized that his story attacking the SUPPORTS MURDER THEORY Jealousy Also Feature of Testimony at Trial of Mrs. Eaton. Plymouth, Mass., Oct. 19.—Medical testimony intended to establish that Rear Admiral Joseph G. Eaton was murdered by poisoning and evidence of his wife's jealousy were introduced I by the state in the trial of Mrs. Jen- «.«, w,u _* 'physician,-told of attending the ad Last of Officers Who Took Part In Orders Servia to Leave. Vienna, Oct. 19.—Austria has sent an ultimatum to Servia demanding the immediate and complete evacuation of the-points in Albania occupied .by Servian troops after the recent con flicts between them and the Albanians. Chipper. ,: 3 j. "Will you saw some wood for* din ner?" "No'm. I don't eat wood."— Houston Post. Prame, V^i the bku, he a re fte I Miss Grace Bryan Howard and Miss Bessie R. Collamore testified that Mrs. Eaton had asked them to accuse the admiral of having tried to flirt with them. Neither had been annoyed by attentions from the admiral, they said. AMERICAN BALLOON WINS Goodyear Captures Gordon Bennett Cup in France. Paris, Oct. 16.—The American bal loon Goodyear, Ralph Upson pilot, was declared officially the winner of the International balloon race for the Gordon Bennett cup. Chile Not to Take Part. Santiago, Chile, Oct. 20.—The Chilean government definitely de cided not to take part officially in the Panama-Pacific exposition at San Francisco, owing to the financial ait* uation of the republic. A Carelessly Treated Cold is the source of most sickness because drugged pills, syrups and alcoholic mixtures are uncertain and unsafe, Scott's Emulsion has been relied upon by physiciansfor forty years as the safe end sensible remedy to suppress the cold and build up the enfeebledforcesto avertthroatand lungtroubles. Don't tolerate alcoholic .substitutes, but insist CAPTAIN INCH Commander of Steamer' Voltur no, Destroyed by Fire at 8ea. ^i Q$f#} CAPTAIN DENIES COWARDLY ACTS Inch Says Volturno's Crew Be haved Admirably. New York, Oct. 17.—Francis Inch, the boyish looking Briton who com manded the burned steamer Vqlturnb, came to port, bringing with him eighty seven survivors, passengers and crew, of his ill starred vessel. His story of the disaster, in which 136 lives were lost, had preceded him by wireless, but in a cabin on the Kroonland, which brought him here, Inch told his tale in simply phrased and modestly spoken details that described more vividly than the wireless could pic ture the panorama of the Volturno's loss and the rescue of more than 500 of those she had on board. y- Cowardice there was none on the Volturno, either among officers or crew, Inch said. There was no rush of seamen which made it necessary for him to warn them back with his revolver. His revolver was in a draw er in his cabin and it burned with the ship. And no one on board drew a re volver. These statements he intend ed should refute the stories told by steerage passengers who arrived on the Grosser Kerfuerst. The Volturno's /master, besides de fending his own officers and men, said he had no criticism to make of the tactics of any of the boats that stood by. "The Carmania did its best, the same as the others," he said. "There is none but praise for every one." RESULTS ON THE GRIDIRON Carlton 61, North Dakota 0. Nebraska 7, Minnesota 0. Wisconsin 7, Purdue 7. Chicago 23, Iowa 6. Notre Dame 30, South Dakota 7. GRAIN AND PROVISION PRICES South St. Paul Live Stock. South St. Paul, Oct. 20—Cattle-^ Steers, $6.50@8.00 cows and heifers. $4.30@7.00 calves, $5.50@9.75 feed ers, $4.30@7.40. Hogs—$7.50@8.00. gheep—Lambs. $5.00(3)6.50 wethers, $4.00@4.25 ewes, $2.50@4.00. Duluth Wheat and Flax. Duluth, Oct. 20.—Wheat—On track and to arrive. No. 1 hard, 84%c No. 1 Northern, 83^c No. 2 Northern, 8iy8@81%c Dec, 81%c May, 85%c. Flax—On track and to arrive, $1.37%: Oct., $1.36% Nov., $1.36% Dec, $1. 36% May, $1.41. Chicago Grain and Provisions. Chicago, Oct. 20.—Wheat—Dec, 82%@82%c May, 87%@87%c Com —Dec, 66%c May, 68%c Oats Dec, 37%@37%c May, 41%c Pork —Jan., $19.40 May, $19.47. Butter Creameries, 28%@29%c. Eggs—26® 26c Poultry—Springs, 13% hens. 13%c. Chicago Live Stock. Chicago, Oct. 20.—Cattle—Beeves, $6.85@9.55 Texas steers, $6.80@7.90 Western steers, $6.20@8.00 stockers and feeders, $5.20@7.65 cows and heifers, $3.50@8.30 calves, $7.00@ 11.00. Hogs—Light, $7.70@8.40 mix ed, $7.80@8.45 heavy, $7.70@8.40 rough, $7.70@7.85 pigs, $5 00@7.75. Sheep—Native, $3.90@5.00 yearlings, $5.00@6.00. Minneapolis Grain. Minneapolis, Oct. 20.—Wheat—Dec, 80%c May, 85%c Cash close on track: No. 1 hard, 83%c No. 1 North ern, 80%@82%c to arrive, 80%£ 82%c No. 2 Northern, 78%@80%c No. 3 Northern, 76%@78%c No. 3 yellow corn, 63%@64c No. 4 corn, 59 @62c No. 3 white oats, 34@34%c to arrive, 34%c No. 3 oats, 32®33c bar ley, 44@67c flax, $1.37% to arrive, $1.37%. ,__, EBERHART SILENT ON RACE Governor Declines to Comment on Iverson'a Candidacy. Governor Eberhart, who, it is ex pected, will again seek the Republican 'nomination for re-election, has nothing to say concerning the announcement^ of the candidacy of Samuel G. Ivefteott, state auditor, and his platform.\ Nei ther would he say" when he .would an nounce his candidacy, if at all. sVfhere"'isf **r plenty, jot time "yet to make announcement of my candi* The Latest Adder Costs But $35 m* See our exhibit—ask for 10 days' trial Here is a new price on a com petent Adder. On a machine that is rapid, full size and infal lible. The very latest machine, built by men who know, in one of the largest metal-working shops. It is an individual Adder, to be placed on one's desk, close to one's books and papers. To take the place of the central machine requiring skilled operators. It is also intended for offices and stores where costly machines are a luxury. The price is due to utter sim plicity, and to our enormous out put. Seven keys do all the work. Each copied number is shown up for checking before the addition is made. The machine will add, subtract and multiply. With very slight prac tice anyone can com pute a hundred figures a minute. And the ma- Name chine. never makes misr takes Stree.. Address-in Countless offices, large City and small, are getting from these machines the atate highest class of service, It was learned that two other men had been hoisted from the mine and hurried to a Hibbing hospital. It was said there they have slight chances of recovery. Mine officials refuse to give out any details concerning the accident IRON ORE IN AITKIN COUNTY Drilling Operations Are Proving to Be Very Successful. Interest in mining circles of late has been turned to the country north east of Aitkin, where drilling opera tions are giving indications of the ex istence of large bodies of ore. While it has been thought that the Cuyuna formation extended in that direction so far little development work has been done there. The Winton-Vermilion-Iron company has drills at work on the north half of the northwest quarter of section 9, 47-26, and fine results are being ob tained. A recent sample of the ore taken from one drill hole assayed 58.74 per cent metallic iron, only .02 per cent phosphorus and 14 per cent silica. This is considered a good Bessemer ore and indications point to a very large body of it. The deepest hole Is now down 265 feet and the iron forma tion, which was encountered at 102 feet, is still holding. GIVE VIEWS ON SUFFRAGE Senators Clapp and Nelson Favor Women Voting. Senators Moses E. Clapp and Knute Nelson have responded to inquiries from the officers of the Minnesota Equal Suffrage association as to their attitude toward woman suffrage. Sen ator Clapp says he favors equal suf frage, while Senator Nelson says he Is not opposed to it .""^ "I have always placed woman suf frage on even a broader plane than woman's right to vote," writes Sena- Now we make this offer so that offices everywhere may learn what this machine means to them. Ten Days' Test We will gladly place In any office one American Adder for a ten days' test. There will be no obligation, and charges will be prepaid. Compare it with any non-lis ter—even the costliest. Let any one use it. See if any machine can serve better than this. Just send us this coupon and -we'll send the machine. FAXACE CmOCEBT CO. Willmar, Minn. Please send us an American Adding Machine for ten days' free trial. Manufactured and Guaranteed by ABOU THE STATE Mews of Especial Interest to Minnesota Readers. THREE MEN DIE IN MINE Funerals of Nashwauk Victims close Two Others Probably AMERICAN CAN COMPANY, CHICAGO Sold in Willmar by the Palace Grocery Co. Difr Mortally Hurt. Three men are known tp have been killed, two others were injured prob ably mortally and more may have been trapped underground in a mine acci dent at Nashwauk. Though the accident occured several days ago no word of it was permitted to leak out until the funerals of two of the men killed took place. All were foreigners. tor Clapp. "Of course, I would not discuss her right to vote any more than I would discuss my own right, as that goes without saying, according to my theory of free government." "I am not opposed to giving women the right to vote," Senator Nelson writes, "although I am not entirely reconciled to the wisdom of it in my own mind, but I have decided to give the cause the benefit of the doubt" GREAT WESTERN EARNINGS We^believe that our 30 years of Ten Per Cent Increase Noted in Re* port Made Public. An increase of $1,205,376.29 in the earnings of the Chicago Great West ern for the fiscal year ending June 30, as compared with the preceding fiscal year, is shown in the annual report of the company, made to the stock holders at the annual meeting Oct 2 and just made public. The total operating revenue for the year was $14,000,618. Of this $9,795,074 was from freight and $3,144,283.86 from., passenger traffic. Operating expen ses were $10,260,142. The total net revenue for the year was $3,742,769, the total charges $2,176,785 and the Burplus $1,245,039. ORE SHIPPED IS RECORD Minnesota State Income Is $340,000 for Three Months, Shipments of iron ore from proper ties leased from the state broke all rec ords during the quarter ending Sept 30. While exact returns are not in an nouncement was made at the office of the state auditor that 1,300,000 tons were shipped from state properties during the quarter and that the total Income from iron mines to the state trust funds from these shipments wi.'l be approximately $340,000, all of it payable Oct. 20. This is nearly $100, 000 in excess of the estimate made by State Auditor S. G. Iverson for the quarter. We are prepared to do a ldnds ol Machine Repair Work And also BRASS and GREY IRON CASTINGS Willmar Machine A Foundry Co. +S I^UATC —A 25c Can of— Common Sense Rat Exterminator may sometime save a $100 00 worth of goods! Get a can now before the rats take charge of your bouse. A Histrum & Co. 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 tranr acting all branches of banking:v S '53 Our Officers will be glad to extend to 30a every courtesy consistent with sound banking. We will keep your valuables in ourfire-proofvault free of charge '}f We shall be pleased to have you call on ua% &0&J?g^MM& ^4^E