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i l*. 0S BRYAN WON HIS SUIT The Connecticut Judge of Probate Held that W. J. Bryan Had Not Used Undue Influence* An Official Order Will Be Made To morrow When Bryan Reaches Tl)at State. New Haven, Conn., Nov. 6.—Judge !,Cleveland of the probate court today announced he had decided there was no undue influence by William J. Bryan over the late Phiio Bennett in the con struction of the latter's will. The seal ed letter about which!there has been so much contention was not incorporated in the will. After the court announced he would make the formal announce ment .of the decree tomorrow because of Bryan's absence he adjourned the 1 shiras re signer-. #1 Washington, Nov. 6.—The president has accepted the resignation of: Oliver P. Shiras. judge of the'federal court ofjthe northern district of Iowa, to takeJ ef fect Nov. i. FREE HOMESTEADS You will have to hurry to jet a good timber claim, to be opened Nov. lO, '03 I Send Ojie Dollar for descriptioii and full information. We can lo ypu .'a'nd do it right. The bulk of this land is in the northern impart of Beltrami County.. If you decide to be located by 'Us, yotir dbllarwill be applied to the regui- Jjfr fee, Address jr I' 1' 5^0* Dakotah Land Roosevelt rj •*f\ "i- ,v.' There's satisfaction in using Falcon Self-Rising1 Pan cake Flour because the cakes for breakfast are always just so. The self' rising flour does away with experimenting, prepared.. V*: :£«i»t*r«/ uick!y Falcorl Self-Rising Pancake Flouf contains the parts of wheat, corn and fye that are best for the stomach. A delicacy—yet a most This is an excellent recipe for Waffles or Gems Two cups Shannon Mott Company's Falcon Pancake Flour, one cup milk, two eggs, one tablespoonful sugar. piece butter size of a walnut. Mix the ingredients thoroughly before adding the flour. Us* no yeast or baking powder. Falcon Pancake Flour at the best grocers* SHANNON S. MOTT COMPANY, "'V Millers of Falcon Pure Foods. feV. .. Des MoinM. Iowa. ERNST HAS MORE TROUBLE. £t. PaiM M#n Charged WlthDelrauUlng Catflw iBc Priest*. y-s 5'- ir"* St. Paul, Nov. 6."—Casper J. -Ernst, capitalist and promoter, who' has been out on bail of $4,500 pending th£ hear ing on charges of-, embezzlement and forgery preferred by Father Metzeler, a Catholic priest of Chippewa Falls. Wis., was surrendered by his bondsmen last night and is now in the custody of a deputy sheriff. The action of his bonds men, one of whom is Ernst's brother in-law, is said to be due to a sensa tional development in the case as a result of the investigation which has been going on since his recent arrest. Ernst is said to have received large sums from people throughout Minne sota, Wisconsin and eastern states to be invested for them at a high rate of interest. Many of his clients were Catholic priests who sent on their pri vate fortunes for investment. What *°.c?.u.n* the total amount of^ money so received was is not yet defintely known, but investigators claim that it was in the neighborhood of $200,000. Pekin, Nov! 6.—Yuan Shai Kai, vic eroy of the Chinese Li Province, who was dispatched to Mukden by the Dow ager Empress with instructions to in-? vestigate affairs and if possible to ar range a settlement with the Russians, did not go any further than Tien Tsin. It is- now considered doubtful whether he will go to Mukden at all. The Chinese aremoret enraged at the Rus sian proceedings at Mukden, than they have been by any events since the tap Hire of Pekin. Some of the hot headed from the council here advised the Dow ager Empress to-declare war on Rus sia and send troops ,to release the Tag tar general whose -detention at. Mukjlen, growing out of the decapitation of the Chinese bandit who had enlisted in the Russian service, but who fell into the hands of the Chinese after the Russians had evacuated Mukden, is the e^use of much irritation. How aboufyour fixtures, are you fittingup ^iiew hfcsiise or arcybu toning iip your.old one? Our fixture patterns are of the newest design, come in and look them overawe believe we can suit you—Whatever you need in the line of Gap *n4 Electric Fixture^ or Supplies, we can furnish you. Our elec i i s a i e e v e y i v e e e s o n w v v,ti Ho'vae Whrlotf, Electric Motor*, Ittytlilagla $£r ro '•n i & A A Lttrfc® Number of -Virginia Since his ar rest Ernst has filed a deed of trust to John D. O'Brien, .his attorney, convey jng to him, with power to sell, two office buildings in the business district. This property is estimated to be worth ^200,000, but Ernst has only an equity 11V it amounting to. about $30,000. GROWTH QF. MACARONI. Sioux Falls, S. D.,Nov. 6,—Over, 000,000 bushels of' macaroni whefcfr has been grdvvn in this state the past year." M. A. Carleton of ,the idepartmeht of agriculture has majie. a statement in part as follows: THE CHINESE WOULD The Celestials Are Aroused Over Russia's Action at Mukden. 'XShf, THE i FIELD GOAL KICKS: 5 to 3? These and other questiohs bearing on the subject Have been asked with frequency and with persistency, es pecially since the game Saturday be tween Chicvago and. Wisconsin, and the opinion on almost every side is that the rules should be changed so that three 'points and not five be given for a place or drop kick. Thus the eleven with a good kicker might have an oppor tunity of holding another, eleven even provided the kicked were able to make two drop or place kick goals to the op posing te'ams' one touchdown. Accord-, ing to football critics this seerr\s to be the correct ratio. Let the touchdown, and goal following count for as much as two field goals. Certainly when a kick gets the same credit as A touchdown, somebody is going to puffer, and it ifi always the team whicn is nqt fortun ate enough to have a first-class man to boot the leather. Walter MacCormack, of Northwest ern, who has proved himself -to be one of the foremost coaches in the west, is in favor of the change, and fye hopes it will be brought about soon. "It seems to me that to almost anybody this allowing a place or a dr6p kick goal as.*?lu -a? a fair," he said. "It is unfair, ,b^cp,\^sfi ex pert kickers are born more than {ney.are made. What I mean is that out of forty or fifty candidates for a fdotball eleven not one can be developed into a good kicker. Then, again, some little out-of-the-way', college or high, school will turn out a man who without any. coaching will be able to put bajl over the crossbar five titijes^. oijt". of seven-" CORONER ARRIVED TOO SOpN An pjtf© ^chool Marm Wasn't st* t'fyf a. "While the price of macaroni wheat has neivef been more than to cents be low No. i northern, it nrust be re membered that it is' an independent crop. "The public has yet to learn the great value of macaroni-flour for bread.^ }i- Havana, Noy. 6:-—Tlle seftate took ,\VP the na'tiphal, lottery 1jll and passed the firsi article/ It is beUfved that, the bill will pass both houses' of congress but the majorities in its favor willt alojt '%e sufficient to overrule the certain Veto of President Pakna. The Indians'Arrested THE EABOO FORUM AND DAILY REPUBLICAN, FRIDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 6, 1903 i' Mont.,' Set&i are dead, a number more burned and perhaps scores lost in the .underground workings of Kearsarge Mine, caused by a fire which started this morning. The mine is located at the siimirtU, eight miles from here. The known, dead are Superintendent R. B. Turner,..a miner Hatned Tobins an^l five others so bfidly burned as to unrecognizable. These were recovered. Fifty or seventy-five are still in the mine. The mine is qwn ed by U.. S. Senator Millard of Nebras ka and is valued at $1,000,000. 6.-Whj^iSy»ld a Chicago, !N*v. man with an educated leg have the: power, to defeat an entirie football eleven? Whv should he be allowed to make as many points either with a place kick or a drop kick as an entire eleven working in unison? Why should not the number of points for a gbal from a place or a dfrop kick be cut from touchdown is un- Oir—r (MM, ''.is \, A Pomeroy, O., Nov* -Mis»i Kate Bradfield, years old,'and'a prdniipttit school teacher, cut .her throaf trofri |e#ir to ear with a razor at her home, near Harrisonyille. She had just returned from a visit to Indiana, and arriving' home went to bed and slept two days and nights before she could be ^waken ed. When $he was Anally arpused she was a raving maniac," and getting hold of a razor slashed "her throat. A doctor was ^t once called and pro nounced her dead, and Coroner Stew art was notified and went out to hold an inquest. In examining the supposed corpse he fojtnd that life .was not.yet extinct. Restoratives were admini$tei ed and she revived and is stillr alive^ but she can survive but a short Gloucester,. Mass.. Nov. 6^-A large 3?ALMA WILL VETO JT -Vrtifrnh^r of riistinsrtKi^hpfl" nri iiurnber of distinguished' speakers" arc to be heard at the tftirtyrsevcifth an nual convention of the Y. M, C. A. of 5 The Cuban lottery bill Was suggested as a substitute for the taxes leVta) sugar, tobacco, liquor# and niches littdfer the new soldier'% fay law: Dur ing the last session ot cofigfes^-.Presi dent Palma declared his intention of vetoing the bill should it* adyocatei suc ceed in passing it. 'X WYOMING GETS THE INDIANS. for Murder WW fto fec tamed to Wyomlnr. Sheyennej Wyo., ^Ov. 6.— e quest of GoVernor Chatterton on' the federal. government for the retntit of nine Indians who were tapture^itfiear Edsemont, S. D., was compli4^Jrith i^a the prisoners were turned 46 "tv*"riiott and -the -pr""" y will. be,,eharg( jff Miljer,: and i* Ates JoJlpwpd the state the the punjshi rtrf .i-' ktes Mar«hjtl E. A, Vfrontj" Washihf tor DptifltM ON Tilt CORNER, VENINSUiaR !. MASSACRED -i*x s South Afrkan Tiibesaien Mflssocrai [an Entire German Colony—Ooloi nists Died Fighting* /-,€£#- Cape Town,, Nov. 6.—Official advices here 'fully confirm the massacre at Warmbad, Damaral and the German southeast Africa by the Bondelz war tribesmen. Germans gallantly fought to the end but were overwhelmed. _*It is believed none escaped. "BOILER EXPLODED./ Columbus, O., Nov. 6.—While har Vesting a field of corn for ensilage with 4 machine operated by an old traction engine the boiler exploded killing Engi neer Charles Pepper and "injuring sev en. one, John Delgam, fatally. Profes sor Vernon Davis and several students were among the injured. i Massachusetts and Rhode Island, twhich opened here today 'and Will continue through Sunday. Some of those who will -address the gathering- arrp Rev. A. C. Dixon, D. D., of Boston, S. M. Sard, state secretary of the Pennsyl vania association^ artd L. -W Messer, general secretary of the Chicago as sociation. v The convention will consider every phase of association ^vork with es pecial emphasis placed on boy's^ work, county.^ork and religious worl^yVT DOGS POISONED 'C^ Cooperstowfn Sentinel: Suit was brought' .in justice't&ftrt last- week by Wm. Anudt against Charley Arndt, ,to recover the value of a couple of dogs: alleged to have been poisoned by the a e v went E' HAVENT the tihie itbPthe{to w^istr to tell ydti,\vhat WE think ot ourselves or our furniture store, but we are kept very busy by many customers, who always gfp'way satisfied, and are living- advertisements irid as 6ur%t ocks^are all new and fresh, strictly up-to-date, no accumnfatio# of twenty-five years'standing, we are in a position to make buying more easy and satistactory to'you. 1 SHERIFF'S SALE. State of North Dakota, Cotittfa^ Cass^i?: .. About one thousand bushels of pota toes in cellar under the residence of said defendant, situated on the north east quarter of section twenty-six township-one hundred^ and forty range foi ty-nine 150 O NV RNTI {jfrJL s The case was taken up Thursday afternoon and tried before av jut-y. The jyry 4lid after about three hours, deliberti tjjan reported that they could "rtot wree,- And they wefe then ^iscliar^d, jptd an adjournsB^ -tSjjlfeii until 5^e ^ocV- ffa- Tne«(^fAli^EHfeftnt. when j^e v^cftfte was again-ad)0»i^9 until Nov. "&• 5ALE^B0JCG ARREST- jn ,whjff^3 on a} lai a a|?p bushels of wheat ift grana.ry west of house, s. w bin. 600 bushels of oats ill same granary. ... 10 v- •, i bay horse/'-ealled, Sf^Nt^^ICO lbs., about years old. 1 white horse, called Noble, wt. 1,250 lbs ,, about II years old- 12 v 1 white marp. ^allfd Topsy, wt. 1,200 lbs., years old. 1 bl^ck holrse, qalifecv Johnson wt. 1^900 lbs., 6 years old. v* .• 1*4 1 brown mare, calle® Minniey .s wt. .i3op,.lbs.t'.9 years old.. 4 sets of double teaTn harness.'' 1 black milch cow. red heifer, 3 years old. s .. i Wpods mower. 1 Thomas hay rake. I Kentucky shoe drill. 17-foot Deering harvester and tirine binder. 4-horse peg tooth harrow. 1 Dowden potato digger. 1 McCor* mick harvester ai^d binder. 1 5-too.th sulky cultivator.. .1. combined spring wagon. 1 new Aspinwall potato plant er.., -.i/--,. :v And that J. ^hall ofr ijtoA te.w4be 'i... A. D. 1903, njimed Pj the abov' said iudi two nun out at about 6 o'clock i«fe W. STOVES Nov,, at the hour of 10 o'clock a. m.,of Vaid day, at the front door of j^e /c^d^e«fA ^«n^anVoct E. Vi Sec. 20I T. 140, R. 49, in said county and. state, proceed to sell the right, title, and interest of the above nincty-fi cruing costs of sale, same from the 13th Hity, i the rate of 7 per cent per lie auction, to the higBeSt^tfidder cash. 17. H: ltwT(irfi| Dated •Fgy interest oil the at TREADW& riiey. Everybody is surprised at the number bf stoves we have to select from. We have Cheap Stoves and some of the most beautiful stoves, that will burn wood, lignite, soft coal- or coke successfully, fend at prices that are $s to $8 cheaper on the same size of other makes. ,• Guaranteed Boncfo i With each store to give satisfaction (jr tnoney refunded. It will be money'ln your pocket to investigate our assortment before pakjng your mind. Jt^cs from v: $1.50 up to «. PIANOS... A good manjr are taking advantage of our low prices on pianos and organs. lDon|t buy until you look us over. We can and do save you money. Licensed Undertakers and Embatmers '6i y ... ... R^bew*~Gv -Sh itrlodc, admini stratrt*' of Wm. C. Shurlock, plaintiff, vs. Pat rick W. Kennedy, defendant. Notice is hereby given, that by virtue of an execution to me directed and de-"' livered, and now in my hands, issued out of the clerk's office of the Third Judicial District Court, state of North Dakota, in and for the county of Cass, upon a judgment rendered in s.aid court in favor of Rebecca C. Shurlock, admin istratrix of Wm. C. Shurlock, plaintiff, and against Patrick W. Kennedy, de fendant, I have levied upon follow ing described personal property of said defendant,- to-wit: ^Chicago, Milwaukee St Paul R. R. TRAIN SCHEDULES. Wkhpaton, Falrmoout, Oraesrllto, St. Paul, Niniie«todiu, points Mst aod south Aber deen, Mitchell and Bloax City The PIOMBBR LIMITED, famous train of the world leaves Minneapolis U p. 01. and St. Paul 9:30 p. m. dally. Ttate trata is a marvel of beauty and perfection. UqalpMa with private compartment cars, first cUibs standard sleeper wltli berth higher, *)der and .longer than those of noy other SMtper In Amerlpa buffet drawing rooap smaker, free ebsfr car coaches—cui« boAriOf atl home comforts. Fir tickets, full Information reffardinc lowest rates to all points, rcserrfetion of Mrttii ifa rie^w^jyai Fargo or on tue FlUNUfta UttlTBO from 8t Panl, sc F&OW* or writ# BPOKANB a SBATTLB taooma PORTLAiCa. CALTFO .J. 1 in and to ••A.'.' 7:30 o. au Fargo-OrtonW 11« oommodatlon...... (26), (140), (49), Cass Co., N. D. All service dally except Sunday, Sleeper from Farg»\7:40 p. m. arrives ift Minneapolis 7:00 and St. Paul 7:40 next morning. Five high class and. modern trains from St. Paul and Minneapolis for Milwaukee and Chicago dally. -t I CARP o u traIns TO ST. PAUL. MINNEAPOLIS, DULUTfl •ana points JBABT AMD Boutw. To »WT# II® FARGO, N. t, •Ax/ rORNIA Jn L^dii A ALASKA KLONplK« !fe wi» & [ELL, "wOa. m. 10Mp.au tmm w. -m*. v AT