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u t$¥: JU 1 'J- t# $ u *yk *. •V «v Ilt*bliih«d 1873. GARDNER, N. D. ARGU8VILLE, N. D. HARWOOD, N. D. MAPLETQN, N. D. HORACE, N. D. LEONARD, N. D. i SHELDON, N. O. Or. F. E. Ball. Dr. J. Graves E N I S Rooms 8 to 12, Smith Block. Telephone 363 L. Dr. H. L. Jflarlla^i DoatUt Office: Boom 5. de Lendrecie Block, Corner Front and 7th 8treets So., Fargo. JAMES W. VXOAL. M. D. Homeopathic Physician and Surgeon 416 Eighth St. So., Fargo. N. D. Office Hours: From 9 a. m, to 5 p.m. Pr&vat* Hospital. DR. CHRISTIANSEN, —DENTIST— Third Floor, Edwards Building. Parco. OR. WHEELER. DR. CARPENTER. Physicians and Surgeons. Office, Edwards Building. Fargo, N. D. ACOKH UND OHBEN KKAVHEITKN OOON SC80B BJOKDOKKS DR. BEAUDOUX SPECIALIST BYB, EAR, ROSE AND THROAT Hours 0 to 12 and 2 to 5. Over Elliott Hotel. Fargo, N. D. Dr. C. L. Rase PENTIST Potcefafo filling, porcelain crdwn'aad bridge work a specialty. Officis Third Floor Edwards Bldg. DR. F. H. BAILEY PR. C. KACHELMACHER Practioe limited to diseases of thai" EYE, EAR, NOSE and THROAT Stern Block, over Fout A Porterflold's Drug Store. Dr. Helen tfeLendreclo Dr. Edward E. BMye Osteopathic Physicians All curable diseases, acute or chronio, successfully treated without drugs. Osteopathic Building, 101 Eighth St. So. Telephone 853. Fargo, N. D. AD1ES! II to $3 will make your soiled party gown as good as new. Let us.send for it. We guarantee satis faction. &/>q Pantorium, Phone 658. 107 Broadway. I". O. R.ocKwell, Mgr. A 1 5 O HACKS or COUPES Day or Night. Jeff Young & Co. Baggage Delivered at All Hours HEAVY WORK HORSES FOR SALE Sixty head from Morton County. Weight from nooto 1500. Dri Holcomb, Washington House Feed and Sale Stable DON'T BE FOOLED! Oenalne ROCKY MOUNTAIN TEA Is pat uf In white packages, manufactured •xclnslvely by the jtadison Mtdicin* Co.. Madison, Wis. Sells at 35 coats a package. All others are rank Imitations and substitutes, don't risk your health by taking then. THEOBNUINE makes sick people Well, Keeps yon Well. All Honest Dealers sell the Oenalne. HOLUSTBR DRUa CO, Madison, Wi» VIENNA BAKERY A A.AA AAAAAAAA j*. A A A ••WWT Always has on hand the famous Macaroni Bread wrapped in wax paper. Hundreds of families are eating no other bread. You, too, will like it, it stays fresh so long. 4 -BUTTZVILLE, N. O. LI8B0N, N. D. DWIGHT, N. D. W WILD RICE, N. fc^'j HICKSON, N. D. ^WAHPETON, N. D. V FARN1INGT0N, N. D. s tt «*'-W %*f tH Incorporated 1699* WHITE LUMBER CO. Paid up Capital and Surplus, $150,000.00 GENERAL OrfXCK AT FAR.GO--R.KTA.IL YARDS AIT 'Orders taken at the General Office In Fargo for all of the above yards. AND DAILY REPUBLICAN. THE FORUM PRINTING CO, A. V. Edradi, Editor. H. C. Pltimley, Manager. VOLUME XXVI, No 308. Entered at Fostofflce as second class matter The Fargo Forum and Uepubllcan Is pub lished every evening except Sunday In the Loyal Knights Temple, First Avenue North, Fargo, N. D. Subscription—The Fargo Forum and Dally Republican, by carrier, 15c per week, or 40c per month, In urtvance $5 per year. The Fargo Fornm and Weekly Republican II per year. The Fargo Forum and Satur day Republican, |2 per year. Single copies 5c. Subscribers will find the date to which they have pnid, printed opposite their names on their address slips. Address all communications to Xho Fo rum, Fargo, N. D. THURSDAY, NOV. 12, 1903. OFFICIAL PAPER OF CASS COUNTY. FORUrt TELEPHONE CALLS. Business Office 504L Composing Room.............*....504Fl Editorial Room4......639L Local Reporters and News Room....639M FARGO TIME TABLO. Trains Arrlre. N. P.—From east, 5:15 p. m., 5:80 a, 'W* 8:40 n. m., 6 p. m. N. P.—From west, T.00 a. m., 8:28 ft, ak. 10:55 p. m. F. & S. W.—From west, 7:05 p. m. C., M. & St. P.—From south, 11:00 a. m. and 6:00 p. in. O. N.—From east, 6:10 a. m., 6:45, 7:35 p. m., 5:20 p. m. G. N.—From west, 3:44, 10:32 p. m., 8:40 a. m. Moorhead Northern arrives 10:15 p. m. Trains Depart. N. P.-Golng east. 7:10, 8:00- W «k, and 11:10 p. m. N. P.—Going west, 6:00, 7:30 a. m., 6^15 p. m. F. & S. W.— Going west, 8:30 a. m. U, M. & St. P.—Going south, 7MM a. B». and 7:40 p. m. G. N.—Going east, 3:44, 7:30 a. m., 8:40 a. m., 10:30 p. m. -•A-) *~"«0 "f t* MOORETON, N. O. BARNEY, N. O. PERLEY, MINN. GEORGETOWN, MINN ELMER, MINN. COMSTOCK, MINN. WOLVERTON, MINN. i G. N.—Going west, 5:10 a. in. and 5:45 p. 111., 5:20 p. m. Moorhead Northern deoarta 6:00 a. m. W Santo Domingo is experiencing her semi-annual revolution. if Colombia is said to bg the victim of circumstances. That is, evident manufacturers The squirming of of impure food shows the campaign against adulterated produ&s is bejng waged to some purpo|ji. Considering the great iscarclty^ of women it is not strange there are so many petitions received at Washington anent the Senator Smoot matter. Colonel Bryan and son have start ed on that European trip. He seems to have been able to raise enough to pay expenses without that quest, $50,000 Of With Senator Gorman the demo cratic candidate for president next year and race the issue sectional prejudice would be a very unpleasant feature of the campaign, which would result in great injury to the north and the south. Enough harm has already been done by unscrupulous politicians in stirring up race prejudice and the effort of Sen ator Gorman to make capital out of the matter marks him as a demagogue of the most dangerous type. National wounds should be healed, not reopen ed. There, aire doubtless a good many honest public officials in this country, men who really believe that it is their duty to act as the representatives of the people and who act up to their be lief. As a rule it will be found that pub lic officials generally strive to serve the interests responsible for their elec tion, rather than the whole people, whom they are supposed to represent under a republican form of government. The individual who is able to control votes is the one who possesses political power. It matters little how he con trols the votes so that he has enough ist&red to command the situation, business. 14 be c7- Dispatches state the special sets* sion of congress opened quietly and everything is going smoothly without a jar. That seems strange with Cannon for speaker and Senator Morgan in good physical condition. The Globe of St Riwl shows marked improvement as a daily news paper, presenting many attractive news features, and each Sunday has a color ed supplement of eight pages, which seems to interest all reader^and brings many new ones to its list. -UMA. A A ,V a '»V^ iff* i Politics is w Colombia might get some of the benefit of the Panama Canal concession by being annexed to the new Panama republic. W If the Colombian grafters had hot been so coarse in fheir methods they might not have lost that $10,000,000 and a substantial annual income from the Panama Canal and the South American republic might ajso have the sympathy of the civilized world in the present o u e i U It is to be hoped that the rumors to the effect that the German Emperor is afflicted with cancer of the throat will not be confirmed by further develop ments. The kaiser has for years been the most conspi-cuous and active per sonage of the old world and has proven one of the best rulers Germany ever had. He has been progressive in his policy and long ago disproved the as sertions of military ambition rather than a desire to promote the welfare of his people. BESTED BY WANDERLUST. He Had a Oood Home, But He Just (^Mil^i't Stay in the Same Place. "Deed, taint no use, kase I got'er skip," wrote Andrew Jackson Tecumseh John son. He had folded the note carefully and tucked it under his pillow at the farm house of Sheriff Twichell down at Mapleton, where the young darkey had been employed to help with the kitchen work. "You see, I just kind'er wandered round befoh I came heah and I mus' start out agin*. You all been kin' to me and I am sorry to leave youse, but I jes doan can' help it. Goodby." After Andrew had written the note he got up and dressed himself and awfay he went. No effort will be made to locate him. Andrew J. drifted into Fargo abbut three months ago. He had a lame foo* and an empty stomach, and he was "powerful" glad when the sheriff allow ed him to sleep in the county jail, and tickled to death when the sheriff gave him a home and employment at the Mapleton farm. Andrew had a new suit of clothes, a number of loud shirts and plenty to eat. He seemed to be con tented, but the old fever to roam Was on him and Tuesday night he vamoosed, Andrew is years old, as black, as night, and as happy as a millionaire. He has been all over the country. EARLY BASEBALL STORtU' During an off season there are rhiny baseball stories started, and their br igin is always lost soon after the start. The latest one to reach this city com#9i! from Crookston and has to do with the Northern League team in that city. In many quarters it' has been suggested that Crookston and Bimidji could com bine on a team to take the place of the present Crookston team, and that the change would be a financial success. Now the other part of the story, which goes to say that Will Lycan, the popu« lar and prosperous landlord of the Ho tel Crookston, is looking for a hotel at Bemidji, and that he will select as man ager of the hotel no less a personage than Walter Wilmot, who formerly managed the Minneapolis ball team and did a similar stunt at Butte last season. With Walter Wilmot manager of a Bemidji hotel and Crookston and Be midji partners in a ball team, it is an easy stretch of imagination to make Wilmot manager of the ball' team that would represent the two cities in the N o e n e a u e V I MAY HAVE A CLUE. 'A Minneapolis Journal: After three days of hard work in trying to solve the mj^tery surrounding the murder of Kris P. Lein, who was found lying mi conscious at the rear of 116-120 Wash- into Avenue South Saturday, the of ficers have found a clue which they think will clear the matter up. They have learned that Lien sold his farm, consisting of 160 acres of good farming land at Princeton, Minn., and that he received a goodly sum for it. This money was deposited in the bank at Princeton, but the officers think that while drinking in a saloon he may have mentioned the fact of the sale and spoken of the money in such way as to lead those who heard him to believe that he had the money on his person. He was then enticed into the alley, slugged and his pockets searched for the money. This belief is strengthened by the fact that Lieri was in the habit, when intoxicated, of boasting about his finan cial condition which was good and also by the fact that in the past few months several men who have exhibited money or boasted of it have been enticed in Jo alleys and robbed. An additional motive for Lieftfs murder lies in the fact that he hju sold a large portion oif his crops aild was believed to have the money his person. Two of his friends froi Hanford, Andrew Sonju and Morj Jahr, visited the morgue this mornft and said that they did not know much money Lien had, but it was sible that he had checks or drafts tf the hotelkeeper knew nothing about Appetite's Gonf Food eaten without appetite always causes gastric disturbances, because tah less the glands of the stomach are stmt:* ulated by a desire for food no digestive juices are formed. Consequently the food is wasted artd clogs up the bowels** FOR LOSS OF APPETITE CONSTIPATION there is nothitlpl equal the Bitters. Try a dose bel^ roeals. It also cures DYSPEPS INDIGESTION, INSOMNIA Al. MALARlA, FEVER AND AGUE. •& a? S* *$* •?n VU: STREET STOfyES Yesterday, for the third time, Judge Gearey beheld Landy's face, this time on the charge of vagrancy. "I will jump nine feet in air with joy, judge," he said, "if you will let me go, and I'll leave town on the first Jrain." He had seen all the sights. The court believed him, and sentence was suspended. The hired girl problem at time^ be comes desperate, still it is not without its sense of humor, too. A certain family, living in Oak Grove, decided recently to move to the south side. The domestic of Swedish origin, and with a dialect that of her native tongue, had been with the family six months when the change of quarters was de cided upon. She watched the prepara tions in silence for a few days, then finally approached her mistress and in all seriousness said: "Miss's you bane move south side. Den ly no bane go darr. Ey no like south /$Jde. It hit* too high tone." 7' A guest visiting a family containing a number of children was frequently puzzled at meal time by hearing one or another member of the household murmur, in a warning tone, "F. H. B." Finally his curiosity became so acute that he asked his host what the saying meant. "It means," replied the head of the household, smilingly, ''that it isn't safe to ask for a second helping, or to ac cept if one be offered—that there isn't, any more of that particular dish in the kitchen." "I see," returned the partially en lightened guest. "But what is the ex act significance of those three letters?" "They stand." said the host, "for 'Family Hold Back.' This story is told by a Scotchman: A minister was what his congregation called "long winded," and he preached strong doctrinal sermons and delivered them in a slow and deliberate manner. One Sunday a friend who was visiting him occupied the pulpit. "Were you pleased with my sermon?" inquired his friend as they walked home together from the kirk. "Weel," said his host, "it was a fair discourse. It pained me at the last to see the folk so fresh and. wideawake. I doot 'twasna sae lang«.nor sae sqqt|d as it should have been." DO YOU WANT A HOME? Desirably located within six blocks of the government building on easy month ly payments interest six per cent a great snap. Morton & Ggm OLD AND NEW WAY. HYOMEI THE LATEST SCIEN TIFIC DISCAVERY FOR TffE CURE OF CATARRH. The discovery of Hyomei has wrought a wonderful change in the treatment of catarrh. Prior to three years ago the medicines ordinarily employed in the cure of this disease were nauseating drugs and worthless tonics, in some instances they benefited, but the improvement was not lasting. With Hyomei you take into the air passages of the throat and head a bal samic air that goes to the minutest cells, effectualy killing all germs and microbes of catarrh. It enters the blood with the oxygen, killing the germs in the blood, and restores health to the whole system. Many astonishing testimonials have been cured by Hyomei. A complete outfit costs but $1 and in cludes an inhaler, dropper and sufficient Hyomei for several weeks treatment. Perhaps the strongest evidence that can be given to doubters, is the fact that the Waldorf Pharmacy has so much faith in Hyomei that they sell every package under a positive guarantee to refund the money if it docs not cure. Now is the time to begin the use of Hyomei. A S\ t. Y *. ,-v v u THE FABGO FORUM AND DAILY REPUBLICAN, THURSDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 12, 1903. S Pat Landy arrived in Fargo three weeks ago from Wheatland with $75. He had earned it by hard work, and in tended to see the sights of Fargo and to lay in some winter clothing. He was taken in tow by some good fellows whom he met casually. A week ago he was in city court on the charge of drunkenness. He made .promises of future good behavior *to the court, .and was released. Within a week he was in court again on the same old charge. He had seen more of the sights. dw i" s 4 A i iv s 1903. "EZY LKiNITE COAL. Washburn Lignite Coal Co's lignite dan be had in large or small quantities of the Wettgewood Dray Line, agents, 614 Front Street, 'phone 774. IMITATION AND NOTICE., State of North Dakota, County of Cass, in County Court, before Hon. A. G. Hanson, Judge. In the matter of the estate of John H. Mappa, deceased. Frances G. Chapman, petitioner, vsi. at 10 (Daily Oct. 1. Albert Olson is in jail at Rugby charged with the murder of Ole Solen, who wis killed late Tuesday night at the farm of Hans Sedji, about fourteen miles southeast of Rugby. The homi cide occurred at a party given by Sedji, at which liquor was said to have been used freely. In the course of a quarrel between the two men- Knudson is said to have struck Solen on the head with a stone, inflicting a fatal wound. DRIVES ALL BEFORE 117 Aches and pains fly before Bu&len's Arnica Salve. So do Sores, Pi«ple», Boils, Corns and Piles, or no pay.^asc Fout & Porterfield. 4 MAY IDENTIFY SKE Grand Forks Herald: "I believe that the skeleton found at Manvef Sunday it that qf poor Joe Fortain. the black smith on the steamer Grand who fell from the boat iritot. the jrtver it this point about two years said. Judge McLoughlin to a Hemld report yesterday. The body ol vlhe Mack* ftii&h ^il* not recovered, alth^|h 'It *ras caught once, but the hooks Broke the body s wof§0 an «1| V* qtte*tton.fj75,: 29, Nov. 5, 12, 19, '03.) THE ULLY T1 W RUGBY HOMICIDE. Plated Ware. We have complet ed our stock In sev eral lines of late pat terns of plated ware that are bo«tad to me«t the approval of all who ex am In tt»m. We Show the product of the great est workmen.dMign ers and silversmiths from the most dto ttagttlsfced silver factories of America. i **(.'t i v iiiitfiiiii i' I'ltg^iiftti iiri EYE SPEX Madden's Way—ALL different He "RENEWS" the Eye. 1023 Masonjc Temple, Chicago 617 Broadway, Fargo, N. D. The only Scientific Prescriber of Prisms and Tone Ground Lenses in the West. This may save you an expensive Eastern journey. A. G. Mappa, Edward L. Humphrey, Fan nie Saltonstall, Dora Campbell, Clara F. Humastcm ahd Cleora Eunice Whray, respondents. The state of North Dakota, to the above named respondents and all per sons interested in the estate of John H. Mappa, deceased: You and each of you are hereby notified that Frances G. Chapman, the petitioner herein, has filed in fhis court a docu ment in writing, purporting to be the last will and testament of John H. Mappa, late of the city of Fargo, in the county of Cass and state of North Dakota, de ceased, with her petition, praying for the admission to probate of said document as the last will and testament of said deceased, and for the issuance to Geora Eunice Whray of letter testamentary thereon, and that the said petition and the proofs of said purported will and testament will- be heard and duly con sidered by this court on Friday, the eleventh day of December, A. D., 1903, o'clock in the forenoon of that day at the court rooms of this court, in the county court house, in the city of Fargo, county of Cass and state of North Dakota and You and each of you are hereby cited to be and appear before this court at said time and place and answer said pe tition and show cause, if any there be. why the prayer of. said petition should not be granted. By the court (Seal.) A. G. HANSON, Judge of the County Court. Dated the 28th day of October, A^ £•, Solid Silver Table Wareif Our line is com plete in this pattern. Solid Silver Table Goods have advanced 10 per cent in value during the past three weeks, but we have a large line of these goods and the price at this store will not be affected by this advance, as long as stock o n a n a s s -V f.i ry\-it' v &5TABUSHBD BROADWAY FARQO .*4--R ft HUNTER HOTEL J.,H. STAFFORD, Proprietor. First-Class Accommodation for the Traveling Public. MEALS SERVED on the Amer O ilcan or European Plan Porter at All Trains. HUNTER, V V JjllLWAUKEI It I I C|lve Us a Trial. N. D. The cost of production has always been a secondary consideration. The very choicest of every component part of the Blatz brews is the invariable rule. Expert judges of barley and hops are engaged in contracting months in advance of the demands, and only the best of Mother Earth's crop is ever considered. Always the Same Good Old Blats BLATZ MALT-VIVINE (Nm-MU) TONIC DRUGGI8T3. Yil Blatz Brewing Co., Milwaukee. "ASK YOUR DEALER." THE ULLY Three Clever Patterns. Rogers' latest pat tern in plated ware is known as the "Mlstlc." High art is reached In this de sign--the product of y e a s V v & v v r'. 14 k* •', !V* 1 i -'.Vi. •ftH i, ,!f.v .Vi Th* Anjott a French pattern, light finish is truly ar tistic, and s guaran tee of 25 years fcKlcs itofster!iag woi^h^:' The "A va 1 on Preach gray finish, and shown In the cut, well worth visit tp our stow to A v w 1 *1* », 11 e w." i vt I* sr I V-*