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W E BIGHONEY I Sseliutre TarrttoiT. One Safe* salt at sJajat* Gttgr on Country. OUTFIT FREE. N O S S S E S: Agents actually getting rich you* On Agent, in one day, cleared S7S.40. Proofs a Catalogue free on application. ALPINE SAFE & CYCLE CO. I N I N N A I O -, C. & ST.W St. S. Subject to change.—N. lLTiine Table. Departure of Trains. Going East. Passenger No 4 (Ex. Sunday.) 6:00 A For St. Paul, Minneapolis, Winona, Mil waukee, and Chicago. Passenger No. 2 (Ex. Sunday) 6:27 p. M. To Waseca. Passenger No.lQ(Daily.} 3:35 For St. Paul, Minneapolis, Winoua, Mil waukee and Chicago. Freight No. 14 (Ex. Sunday.) 11:80 A Carry Pusseugers to Waseca. Departure of Trains. Going West. Passenger No. 5 (Ex. Sunday) 8:17 A.M. For Tra^y. Passenger No. 3 (Daily.) 1 6 For Tracy, Marshall, Watertown, Huron and Pierre, Passenger No. 7 (Ev. Minday.) 8 SOP M. Fo»- Tiacy and West. Freight No. 15 (Ev. Sunday 1 1 0 Arrive of Trains FiomEast. Passenger No. 5 (Ev. Sunday) 8-17 A.M. Passenger No. 3 (Daily.) 2 1 6 Passenger No. 7 (Ex. buuday 8 3 5 Freight No. 15 (Ex. Sunday.) 12:45 Arrival of Tiains. From West. Passenger No. 4 (E\ Sunday.) 6 0 0 A Passenger No. 1 0 (Daily.) 3 3 5 Passenger No. 2 (Ex. Sunday) 6 -27 M. Freight No 14 (Ex. Sunday".) 11:15 Trains No. 4 and 7 have sleeping cars between Kasota and Brooking*. Trains 10 and 3 have sleeping cars be tween Mankato and Chicago and chair cars betweeH Kasota and Minneapolis. F^r further information mquiie of II. i. BEECHBU, \gent, sew trim A C. Johnson, W. B. Kniskeni, General Agent, Gen. Pass. Agect, Winona. Chicago. Stoves, etc. I MRS. H. LAUDENSCHLAGER P%om Are Made by reading FARM, STOCK HOME, MIKNBAPOiaS W Every Numbe Filled xritix Practical, Helpful Suggestions for he S O A N O A N A I A I S I S AMD O S W 1 Issued Semi-monthly 24 Papers a Year ONLY SO CENTS A YEAR. Six months, 3 0 cents. 3 Months, on trial. IO cts. loveinaCo S? Bread and cheese kisses, are all right a few other things Hamm' St.Paul arfd a heap*of comfort*** Hammfe Beer is a pure tjplsW dons fwmebrew.Hbrrt yottm tryit*~ Agent&v«wryvHtea«# TheoiiariintBreivMOk iMINNESOTA N E W a Invested. The investment of a half mlHidn from payment on land certificates and he S atfr land sales held by he Mate auditor since Jan 1, has just been completed' by the state treasurer. Th last $20O,-J Is&iS^ non *,n.™»„*„j J- cent interest for the first year and 3 per cent thereafter. Some difficulty has been found in securing desirable investments for the school fund, and as a result with the last investment made, as well as pre^ vious ones, it was necessary to pay a premium on the bonds before they could be purchased. In all, the state has invested in United States' bonds and the Massachusetts, Alabama!' Delaware, Tennessee. Virginia, state capital certificates and other miscel- as an asset $6,280,003 due on land con- tracts, that is, land sold to settlers on ?f She seemed in unusually bright spirits and talked cheerfully to her 17-~ year-old daughter, Mary, to whom she remarked that she believed she was getting well and would live many years. Mother and daughter were busy to gether about the house until shortly before 9 o'clock, when Mrs. Cizek re quested her daughter to play the piano. The daughter complied, and played a number of selections, while she supposed her mother was engaged in an adjoining room. Finally, calling to her mother, and getting no re response, Miss Cizek became alarmed and began searching for her. Took a Tumble. E a in he in a at he a a Crookston tell of a so to to he a a is a of a 25 feet. I is at he ad is in it in is in escape, it is he as siin a in in his sleep a he fact at he a partly on so me a a a in AMthout in himself he least, a suspicion to he a is of is belief I to of he in dow he ad to a a re a a a bed in he Forcible Possession, Forest Fires. Forest fires on the line of the Du luth & Iron Range road totally de stroyed the camps of the Martin Tie & Lumber Company, near Waldo station, nothing but horses being saved. The lumber camps of Scott & Holston Lumber Company were also threat ened but were saved. The telegraph operator at York station was com pelled to abandon his office, which did not burn, however A heavy shower has dampened the woods considerably. News Brief. The bids for the construction of Polk count new court house, to be erected in this city this summer, was let today to the Gross Construction Company, of La Crosse. The building will cost $54,696. The St. Paul agent of the American Tobacco Company says that a single shipment of seven carloads of cigar ette tobacco is on its way to St. Paul. It will be distributed through the Twin Cities and the Dakotas. Excellent work is being done by Prof. Shaw, of tbe state agricultural school, who is instructing classes of boys from the public schools in the art of gardening. The Minnesota Sunday School Asso ciation, at its final session in St. Paul, elected the following officers: Presi dent, Lowell E. Jepson, Minneapolis treasurer, Willard B. Clow, St. Paul directors to serve three years, H. B. Avery, Minneapolis Ralph Powell, St. Paul John Bell, Minneapolis Charles N. Miller, Minneapolis Mr. Hawks, Duluth. While holding- possession of a build ing leased to S. Lobdeil ?s a meat market at Mankato, George E. Keene, a well known photographer, shot Lob- Baumhoff and other employes of the dell, inflicting three wounds, none of office department, United States them servious. Lobdeil emptied his District Attorney Rozier Saturday ap re\ohe at Keene. without effect, peared before Judge Elmer Adams, of Lobdeil was battering bis way in at a United States district court, and door. A crowd was present, besides attorneys for both sides, and Chief Bruees and one-patrolman Keene and Lobdeil are both under arrest. The affair caused much excitement, as both parties are well known. Stanislaus Szudera, the 8-year-old The Italian laborers employed by the Northern Pacific have gone out on a strike, demanding more wages for the hours they are obliged to work. About six hundred are implicated in the strike, sixty being employed near the city. I is thought that the. dif ferences will soon be settled. Mathilda Peterson, the only girl in the senior class at Macalester, has been assigned the first honor, the valedictory oration. Th second hon or and salutatory oration was -won by Sof 8mlth, ot Boyn? City, Mich., and the third honor andfeHtoraryoratkfe St. Louis. STrgSS S S S "M"f KM THE HOSrlTM*. Proarress Effort to I a a a S a S I on Aatced A a in Interfering- it Mail Cars—Iiabor Union S a a Btar a a a a ~St. Louis, May 21.—The street rail way strike situation is without mar a a a a a 4 %f^L iime, bearing a good rate of interest, a before the strike began making a total of over $13,000,000 Suicide to Music. & so far as the number a OP6***10* concerned. So A an a a laneous bonds, over $7,000,000. I Transit company has in. operation on The various school funds alsoPhave St.'lands """PO"*** its sys- a 5 0 ca™' A a J*? owned by the permanent, general and T™*** company permanent university fund. Mrs. Barber Cizek, of St. Paul, com mitted suicide by hangingvherself over but the strikers declare that the com the stairway leading to the basement' pany has not enough men with which of her home. The body had been to operate more. hanging nearly an hour when found. During the past few days the inter Deceased was a sufferer from melan- ference by mobs has become so gen cholia, and at times had talked of eral and the casualties reported so death. comparison with 800 which were I a ad- is laboring. On the part ot the street railway company it is claimed at the want of proper protection of the lines is one cause for this condition, a at it is a he a it will a police officers a in he a it loaded it will be in it is a to fire in to at tempt tot interfere with the running of cars, Mt%i^r ^heif crews in the dis charge o&their dufk. Kajay* Majsf in it a So5 a nearer 70. employes of the Transit c^iapany^ mostly motormen, have beetfaurider the surgeon's care since ttfe^fitpke began. Most of the cases areCtriflibg, cuts and bruises from fists or rocks, predominating, but there are some serious ones in the number. In many of the sheds and powerhouses of the St. Louis Transit company hos pitals have been established, and there are patients in almost all of them. The emies patients are employes of the company, wounded or beaten by crowds of strik ers or their sympathizers. on S a S The action of the Trades and Labor union in adopting a resolution recom mending that labor unionists quit work on a call from the executive committee of that body, lias put a different aspect on affairs and complicated matters. I remains to be seen, howe er, how many of the different unions will order a sympathy strike Each union must settle the matter for itself by a three fourths vote. At least two of these unions will not go out. These are the Typographical and Pressmen's organi zations A or I On a complaint of Postmaster asked for an injunction restraining the strikers from interfering witu the op eration of mail cars over the tracks of the St Louis Transit company. President W G. Mahon, of the Inter national Amalgamated Association of Street Railway Employes, Chairman Missick. of the executive committee of the local street railway employes' union National Organizer Harry Bry ant, of the Street Railway Employes' union, and 47 others are named in the petition for the injunction Judge Adams has taken the petition under advisement, and the mean time asks for additional affidavits of postal employes, as to interference with the cars a Sto in a a Because they fear a collision with the participants in the parade Satur day afternoon, the management of the St. Louis Transit company decid ed not to run any more cars on its lines after 12:80 o'clock. It is intimated that this order may extend over Sunday also. A a Preparations for the great demon stration and parade in the afternoon of organized labor in favor of the striking street railway men were completed early and it thought that at least 35,000 men were in line. Fif teen bands furnished music for the parade, which started at four o'clock and marched through the downtown streets of the city. Henry Blackmore, president of the Building Trades council, was the grand marshal, his aides being P. J. Coughlin, John Goedeker and E. M. Bannister. All of the street car em ployes paraded in their uniforms and caps, but without their badges. re to son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Szudera, I tempted to commit suicide by drown was drowned by jumping into the Mississippi river at Winona from a boat in which he was playing. The body was recovered within an hour. Salt Lake City, Utah, May 21.—The Desert News says the man who at- ing in the Jordan river and was res cued by the police $s Samuel Moser, whose wife and four children were murdered at their home, three miles from Tremont, 111., on Sunday even ing. Moser is alleged to have made a full confession of the crime rn is now in the custody of the police, Reaches Qneenstown. &»«*1 Oaune. o«t*J of raitt. ATTKHDAHCE KEEPS UP. a a and, a S a to at he Seanfosr afc, I «aeI*renferterianAMen»blr.% St. Louis, May 21,—Despite the a W ffn and the street car strike, the attend a at the'on session of the Pres- Ibyteria general assembly held Sat leading features of these reports were made by distinguished divines. Mr. John *J.„ Converse, vice moderator, pre sided over the deliberation of the first and only session, which ad journed ^shortly after noon until Mon- a 3 Rev. Benjamin L. Agnew, D. D., sec retary of the board of ministerial re lief, made an eloquent plea on behalf of the ministerial relief fund. gave a long array of statistics show ing that the hoard had on its roll one minister's family to every eight ministers on the roll of the general assembly. I 1860 the board had only one minister's family on the roll to every 87 ministers in the assembly. Rev. Wallace Radcliffe, D. D., of Washington, D. C., was the first cham pion of the Peoria overture, which provides that the moderator shall upon the organization of the assem bly appoint a committee of ministers and elders to aid him to the appoint ment of a standing committee, said committee to be composed of 21 com missioners from different parts of the country, not more than two of whom shall be from any one synod. Before Dr. Radcliffe concluded his address, amid considerable excitement, a call was made for adjournment of the assembly until Monday morning, and the time for further considera tion of the method of appointment of standing committees of the assembly was fixed for next Thursday The commissioners were given a steamboat excursion on the river in the afternoon. Many attended de spite the rain. A popular meeting of the assembly was held in the Compton Avenue church in the evening, and five-min ute addresses were delivered on the subject "Aid for Colleges and \cad- TO SUBMIT CREDENTIALS. a a W ill Sen to S a a a in A of isi Washington, May 21 —The creden tials of the Boer delegates, now Washington, will be submitted to the secretary of state Monday next Col O'Beirne called at the state depart ment Saturday afternoon and ar ranged with Secretary Hay that the Boer credentials should be submitted in advance of the presentation ot the gentlemen themsehes This is in ac cordance with the usual form gov ern ing the presentation of foreign minis ters. So Mr. Bruyn, the private secre tary of the Boer delegation, is expect ed to bring the credentials to the state department Monday, where they will be submitted for the careful examina tion of the department which does not at present know anything of their character. urday was as large as on preceding days. Much interest was shown in the reports of the special committees, only two of which were under consid eration. Brief addresses on various perial guard, obtained the concession PRONOUNCE IT PLAGUE. a of a ofv. Sa a is Sajs he re ad is a E is in he it San Francibco, Ma\ 21 —The board of health has adopted a resolution de claring that bubonic plague e\jsts in ban Tiancisco The health authorities sa\ that while there are no living cases here, there have been six deaths dur ing the past three months, and they have decided to take precautions against the development and spread of the disease A Final Appeal for Peace. Berne, Switzerland, May 21.—The committee of the international peace bureau has decided to make a final ap peal to the 25 powers who are signers of the conventions adopted The Hague peace conference, in favor of the restoration of peace in South Af rica. The committee calls attention to the clause of the convention, for the peaceful settlement of interna tional conflicts by the terms of which the signatory powers agreed to use all efforts for the settlement not only of difLra.iities among themselves, but of all international disputes. Conse quently the committee declares, an offer of mediation cannot be consid ered by Great Britain as an unfriend ly act Deadlock Over Bishop. Chicago, May 21.—There is a dead lock in the balloting for bishops at the Methodist general conference, but a landslide is possible. Berry still leads, but Spellmeyer has taken a sud den drop, and on the strength of a powerful speech he made on the limita tions of the episcopacy Dr. T. B. Xeely jumped to 193 votes. I is still believed, however, that Dr. Berry will be elected. On the eleventh ballot, read at noon Saturday, Dr. Joseph Berry, cf Chi cago, had 310 votes Dr. J. W. Hamilton, 281, making him second- again Dr. D. H. Moore had 255 Dr. Spellmeyer was only fourth with 239, and Dr.Xeely had 193 votes. ... a a Philadelphia, May 21.—A continuous fall of rain Saturday caused a post een Queenstown, May 21. Howard Gould's yacht Niagara, with its owner and party on board, arrived Saturday ponement Of a games betw morning. All are weR. Th Niagara I he University of California and the will remain- until Monday, when she ^University of Pennsylvania and also *gjf coattnenVffiir •.£ the baseball game between PennsyJ jL^4WBL_J_ *__'.._ 1 I 1 S Wani a and Harvard. A effort will be made to a a a future date with bsSfcL RICH GOLD FIELDS a a a Hope ta ad Saetv a Mortiteaatem Part- at ». ™™-, SIfcerta. New gold fields rivaling in richness the deposits of Cape Nome wilt be opened to American miners if the ex pectations of the members of the Rus sian expedition, which have arrived at New York on its way to northeastern Siberia, axe fulfilled. Vladimir Wonlar larsky, a colonel ot the Russian im- of the vast Siberian tract which the expedition is to examine. There were more than 40 applicants for the grant, which ad been sought with eagerness since the discovery of gold on he American side oft he Behring sea. By means of court influence, backed by pressure from other sources, Col. Wonlarlarsky carried oft the prize. formed a company in Russia which planned the present expedition, headed by A Bogdanovitch, a Russian engi neer.. It is understood that a sub sidiary company has been formed in England in» connection with the con cession, but secrecy is maintained in regard to the English and American interests. Miners who have visited the Siberian coast by stealth have reported that it is practically the same as the Nome coast, consisting of a strip of beach, behind which lies a tundra or belt of gold-bearing sand, which has been thrown up by the action of the waves and frozen. No attempt will be made to work in the tundra this year, but the party hopes to be able to make some con tracts with American owners of pumps and dredges. PREPARING NEW BOND PLATES re a E a in a in in at W a in to at "Work. Assistant Secretary Vanderlip, who is devoting much of his time to the su pervision of the work in the bureau of engraving and printing, said that the plate for the new $1,000 registered bond of 1930 would be completed by the en graver in a day or two. The $50,000 reg istered plate is expected to be finished by the 25th inst. and the $10,000 regis tered plate by May 30. I will be 30 days after each of these respective dates be fore the' plates from which the bonds will be printed will be ready for use. It is probable, therefore, that the first bonds will be ready for distribution about June 15 next. As all of the re sources of the bureau have been con centrated on the registered plates, nothing ha,s yet been done on the coupon plates, but they will be gotten out as promptly as possible after the others are disposed of. The work on the new national bank notes also is progressing satisfac torily. About 25 new plates are being finished every week, and it is expected that this number will be doubled with in ashort time, as a number of addition al engravers have been put to work on them. The notes themselves, however, will not be ready for about 30 days after the plates are completed, as the process is the same as is used with bond plates. CAUSES PANIC ON SHIP. a E a I a a Is Is a to It. The German .steamship Pisa, of the Sloman line, which arrived at Brook lyn from Hamburg, was loaded with wild animals. The trip was rough, and ostriches, monkevs, camels and even tigers were tossed together con fusion. Th ship on May 9 was thrown into a panic by the escape of a large and ferocious panther from his cage, which the rocking of the storm ren dered insecure. The panther was loose in the elephant section. The huge beasts, anchored to stanchions, tugged at their chains and bellowed in terror and fury. The panther sulked and paced between decks, looking at each elephant in turn, as if to choose which to attack. By waving a bit of canvas through a hatch the attention of the panther was diverted. A coun cil of war was held. The keepers, trained animal experts from the Ham burg winter menagerie, attempted to entice the panther back into his cage, but failed. Then Capt. Fendt, of the Pisa, brought out his revolver. The animal was scared into a corner. Capt. Fendt, his aim guided by the panther's eyes, with four bullets ended the beast's life. DESCENDED FROM JOHN ALDEN W a an (111.) a A In a re in to he Pilgrims. Little Miss Dorothy Bradford Alden, of Waukegan, 111., is the youngest di rect descendant of John and Priseilla Alden, of Mayflower fame. Her an cestry traces back to the Mayflower band of pilgrims in a line more direct and stronger than that of any descend ant in other branches of the family known of to-day, because both of her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. R.Alden, are from different pilgrim families. R. Aldenisadescendantof Joh Alden and Mrs. R. Alden is a descendant of John Howland, another of the Mayflower band. The Alden ancestry traces as fol lows: Dorothy Bradford Alden is the daughter of Arthur Alden, who was a •son of Abner Alden, son of Earl Alden, son of Nathan Alden, son of Joh Alden, son of Joseph, Alden, who was he seoood son. of Joh Alden (the ), who oame over In the Mayflower. **s a the first tftt^T«»tt~^*l««^^iw-.aft|fpafatfrom 12 to I4hoatsafid bad to be tfaccd under the mffamcr of chloroform. I used three bottles of Homer's Friend before oar last cmU came, which is a strongs fat anct neattny boy, doing niy booscwork isp to wuimi two hours of birth, and mf fercd bat afew hard paififc I ins O mentis the est HI unify made/* Mother's Friend will do for every woman wftat it dad for the Minnesota mother who writes the above let ter. Not to use it during pregnancy is a mistake to be paid form pain and suffering. Mother's Friend equips the patient with a strong body and dear intellect, which in turn axe imparted to the child. It relaxes the muscles and allows mem to expand. It relieves morning sickness and nervousness, It puts all the organs concerned in perfect condition for the final hour,so that the actual labor is short and practically painless* Dan ger of rising- or hard breasts is altogether avoided, and recovery is merely a matter of afew days* Dragztsts Ma Mother's Friend for $1 a bottle. The Bradfleld Regulator Co., Atlanta, Ga, Send for our free illustrated book. "It speaks for itself" DAKOTA HOUSE. 0pp. POST O I E N W JJ\M, I N S I S This honpr is the most centrally located hotel the city affoids. Good Sample Roems. Free Homes for ii -J?! rl (sDeiler? vzpop» •M 3*- 20,000,900 Acres Wheat and Grazing Lanas fcr Settlement in Manitoba, Assinibcia, Alberta and Saskatchewan. Deep soil, well watered, wotRKd, easily reached by railroads. Wheat av 'leragea 25 to 35-bushels to the acre J^\'' Vast areas suitable for the growth of K? grains and grasses, stock, &c, yet tmoc o*k copied. Immense coal fields, gua-anteelng wt an illimitable supply of cheap fuel. The feu Canadian Government gives FREE FARMS OF 160 ACRES to every male of eighteen years and to every fe male head of a family, offering independence for life to every one with little means, bat having sofuaent energy to settle. Climate healthiest in the world. For information address Snpt. Immigration,Ottawa,Canada, or B. OAVIES. Canadian Government Agent, 1644i E. 3d St, St Paul, Minn. IJelle* & Sag. THE LEADING PAINTERS Do all kind-, of {uniting, from hoUP painting and decorations to ^oituuto Artistic frts( oing a specisihy. Sh©p and office tinder Brown Co. Bank. ELHiRA COLLEGE for WOMEN Chartered 1855 High grade college coarse. Superior advantage* In music aud art. Faculty, buildings, equipment* and grounds, Bnpenor. Home comforts, family spirit, pleasant association with teachers assured. Delightful climate, health record of students in surpassed. Increased endowment, scholarships and generous cash prizes. Modern improvements, steam heat, electric light and elevator. Present day methods. Advanced scholarship, unsectarian, pos» Jtively Christian. Tuition for College course, horns and board, three hundred dollars a year The bighest possible college course at the lowest pos sible rate. Correspondence mvitea. A. e. BACKEfZI£, D. D., Preddent, HT.MTBI, g. T. AUG. SCHELL, BKEWER AND MALSTEK N E W I N N hl» brewery a one of thejargest establishment* •f ita kind in the Minnesota Valley and is fitted n» with all the modern improvements. Keg and bot tle beer furnished to any part ef the city en short netioe. My bottle beer is especially adapted ft? .smily use. Country brewers and others that bay malt will find to their interest to place their orders with me All order* by mail will receive my prompattea don, &J q«y»oa»a«w»* l*\dr»*aMt,..^ QTTf SCHELL, Manager. *m -s 50 YEARS* EXPERIENCE A E A S E S I N S COPYRIGHT S A Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain oar opinion free whether an invention is probably patentable. Commnnlca tionssMctty confidential. Handbook on Patents sent tree. Oldest agency for securing patents. Patents taken through Mnnn ft Co. reserve specialnotice, withou charge, Scientifict American.ethni A bandaomelyniastrated weekly. Largest ctfc. Mtfaiimi of any scientific Jottrnnl. Terms, S3 months, fL Soldbyafl newsdealera .. Co.36""*1"*'Mew Yo* Branca QfBee, «85 St, WasninslaD, «V(L lftaaJHea ska neaaswa vf*, Drive. •ilnecarriaxedoqblestbepleasureof ing. Intending buyers of carriages or ness can save dollars by sending for largevfree catalogue of the Blkhart and Barness afig. Co* Blkhart/Ind* l!