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vj*. z v-» m?. :»fe •2r|'' i' :':\j ••/.* y 'H^V ,D-X if* Ky A v ?xr:rv l^®|$lill ::ISptlSifc® .v S 4-^ VU'. /f, .&y .V.V, V& ji ,4 li Hrv.^v&v -•••. v5"ri '', 11A ,:'J tefs.' I'M V" i \V -S !'#£••& 3SK4S,', .•' \*V\ViW 1 'A/ W' -.i -%6vj5A •'?Vi V •_ v/- v-i p#i5 V' t' CURTAIN 8:3a SHARP, ', Nov. 24 |Jlr. F. C. Whitney presents iLulu Glaser t'V The Queen of Singing Comediennes i«p Jv way, Fargo, N. D. w i -V v i i 'y-1,-*: &* 'tM. sl«^ -k'i* V $ .'r ^rii '. '-M i -'.^t? v, if* Comic Opera iif Two Acts. £iy Stanislaus Stange and Julian Edwards. Beautiful Scenery! Magnificent Cos tumes! A Perfect Production! PRICES: '•-/••.•'' H-V'.^- iJntiro lower floor.i4.iii $ 1.50 Entire Balcony .".4..., l.Oo Gallery .50 Theodore Thomas Orchestra Nov. 28. 4. N. Matiaat M. D. EiluMb fUatflml •. D. a- DRS. RINDLAUB SPECIALISTS. v BYE, BAR, NOSE AMD THROAT V FARGO, N. D.', fa'•dJLfa&wcfa Block, opposite H. P. Deoet PROFESSIONAL CARDS ATTORNEYS, 'A/^K, AUT] HlTlt R., ATTORNEY AT LAW, i Magili Building, Broadway and V.toflioes in jfgFront Street, Fargo. Practices in arl .. :4racouit3. i^pjUNKR, H. R., ATTORNEY AT LAW. ,v*g/tfncea in Edwards Building, Broadway. •r-- ,I,ractices Jn aU courts. m^ltNiOTT & REESE, ATTORNEYS AT i- Law—Offices: 4 and 8 Morton Building, •^Broadway. ^)LE, A. T., LAWYER, ROOMS 18 TO 2L i.,tHuutiugton Block, Broadway. •IlLLEU, HENRY P., ATTORNEY ANjJ t- Counselor at Lnw. Over Fargo National j!,|njai)k, Fargo, N. D. MpKINNON, ,T. E., ATTORNEY AT LAW. J-Clti Front Street, Fargo. Practices in ail •-.-MmCourts. Tax eases n specialty. 'EWJ', W. A., ATTORNEY AT LAW, 3"llilee socond floor Morton Block, Broad- v: AR&k{ii£&$$. r..t v4J,RRANT, W. o.', StoCttlTEOT AND fc£ Sii|»eriutendent. I'Japs, estimates and de- ri'.-tnlls. Ofllce: No.''»4 Broadway, Fargo, !j»YN. D. Telephone No. B3-4. Jl. J. O'SHEA, A ItCIIITEG^P AND SUPER -iiliOJtondent, practical plans, specifications 1 %iHl .riMJmatPs furnished for nil kinds of .iw^ hwllditigs. Offices N. p. Block, Broadway. INIXX'K BROS., ARCHITECTS, ^jnce over Douglas Block, 113 Broadway, Fargo. Plans and estimates for all kinds or ,.punaings. •PHYSICIANS. WEAR.-D^. SottlvNESS-PHYSICIANS nd 8urgnons. Ofllco over Wilser's Drug ifcore. Office hours 10 to Is a m, 2 to 5 and to 8 p.jn, ItKOW & WElBLfe, PHYSICIANS AND surgeons. Office deLendrecle Block, cor oner of,Front and Seventh Streets. Office hours: ii to 12 a. ni., 8 to 6 aud 7 to p. m. Fargo, N. D. Ht. C. N. CALLANDER. DB. A. C. MORRIS, PHYSICIAN^ AON© tfPRGEONS. Office Hour| r^ V ^,^%}?folIloe Hours: '4':^ 11 to 12 a. m* V" to 11 a. m, S to 6 p. nt,:•%!"?/ J'1 to 5 p. m, \\i 7 to 8 p. m." ,:v v" 7 to 8 p. m. iMM air. it it- 5 Tel. 315 K ottlco. 345 Residence. 1043 Residence, UNDERTAKERS. I £f*V LICENSED 10MMAI.MKH—FUNBRA*. ^ISnppIIes. J. F. Rice, 8 South Broadway,' ... rear of Moody'B store. A S MUSTER RVBRY MAN that i fit makes afav- u orable impression*-as far as cloth hw coi do It: and If a maA will live up to. my Cloth toe be can' pass muster 'any where. PETER PICKTON, MERCHANT TAILOR. MNTH tT. 1 rMIM, R. D. For Sale By .' 11 1 Sawyer ^n^efaof. prosperity. TKe people of Glevdand vratit a depot. 5 Shaclc.. thleyes $te active ground Sawyer.' A seven foot timber wolf was killed near Balfour. Editor Potter of Casseltofi wants GaBS County: divided. The boozeries, at Portal are said to be closed—perititfjjently. ':^S^^ti^fcV6'atA'iSwii!^^the of Edkpr of Anetai v .. ,V- THe, 'Ca»$elton Reposi^r watits:the Cass County courthouse. THe to'^n without a skating-rink is the exception—this winter.- Many hoinesteaders are taking claims around Ryder, Ward County. The Milnor Tell^r and The Hayana Herald editors are^stifl^tafiir fea^£(OtIt er. The Kulm' Mc'sSehger Wants'to draw the deadly parallel an the Ashley mur der. Etland of Ancta won the wrestling watch'^ith "Soapyf' Smith-of Madison, wis. §ome ^\'Ha^:sfa:rt^.a 4oant for Joe Devine for tKe next state treas urer. More building was done in Skrgent County this year than in many former years. Some one. has been hypnotizing the woodpile of(Bditor Laytoit'of DeLa mere. i I K trHH PAHGO POETJM 'AltD DAILY. fiEPU i.'nrr' The neW school building at Mhiot will be completed by Dec. 15.. Some Vplley Cityians went to l^oii tana on a bear hunting trip. A lot of Minot hunters were success ful in their chase after deer. A number of the good people ot Sheldon are locating in Fargo. The Ryder-News must think the ken nels man is long on—diamonds. The state manual training school football team defeated Aberdeen. o Judge Glaspfcll took the sale of the electric light plant at Valley City under advisement. v With wood $9 p$r cord 'and^ hard coal $10—there i|re few jNSOjile burn ing—wood. Tlie promot^rs of the new Renville Comity assert they are, not r. dead— t1ie*%ew^pap^r jtoyst enjoy pig^pingf, ,(rp 'toUK stories iibottt 'cactus conventions. It is now claimed that E. R. John son of The Flaxton Eagle has purchas ed The Minot Op^r. Some of the editors want more at tention paid to the selection By thb tifag the "experts" get through testifying jin the Barry trial a lot of the spectators will be bug house. Valley City has .421 telephone sub scriber? and. about steen huudred other people .who iuse their neighbors' phones. L. J. Frazier. the former state uni versity football star, is to be married to Miss Lottie J. Stafford of Pembina County. The Buffato 'Ejcpress thought ^ome of Eli Perkins' jokes were bewhiskered but says lie told them well—and pleas ed the audience. il, Editor Reinicke secures, full con trol of The Grand Forks Plaindealcr he will give the democra|s .« jpiaper they will be proud of. A concert compaiiy is ^skld to li^vc neglected to pay some bills at Grand Forks and in the future some people will insist on a cash basis. It is said that some of the democrats failed to respond -tp a movement to purchase The Plaindealer—because of the promoters of the plan. One fellow writes that lie would send the kernels man* two gteser—if the re cipient was married. The k. m. would commit bigamy for two—fat ones. A Ward County man, rec«»tly marr ried, awoke the bther itiorning and found his wife gone. He applied to the Minot officials to aid him in the search for her. The fire at Hilfsbora -made one l'ess paper 10 the eastern part qf ithe state but-a hunch of new onies in the west ern part of North Dakota keeps tlie average up. The rLi^hori v„Fjree Michi tmy pr W For State Nfrws Read v TWO KINDS OF CHiLDRtft GMtdr^ili iiiat grow too hi and those that seem hardy to grow at all, both aid Scott's Emulsion. Mothers ought tb kfti^r more about the wondeiiil help which Scott's £muls:ti would give their children. We'll send you a sample free upon request SCOTT & BOWNE, 409 Pearl Street, New' rfc. FIRST NOBLEMAN AS STUDINT Yale University Has the First Nobleman deist In Louis de Mores. ,V"A (t of awor- ney generals in the future. \^£itratiojt '•niay ^e neede'3'-"to' settle the football row between the Casselton and the Valley City high school te'ams. There is general disappointment over "the failure to establish briquetting plants in the western part of the state. About the only state institutions that Editor YVood of Steele seems to cher ish are the state bughouse and the pen. frela womStefs how MAffr ipe la Bere of Sheldon ever |fot sum^piijtly, interested .in water to discover iti^tning about the freak weM in that vicinity. dependent mifcht .dvantjie read- th »tter. st fa# Divine xthi one e&W wuitl a "beattt" Stu- Ijjcfcial dispatch from New Mn^n, Conn., to The New York Herald iys: Yale University has in Loui de Mores, as he has been known anong his classmates in the freshman of the Sheffield Scientific School fifSt nobleman student. Througl visit of his mother, the Marquis Mpres, it became known today th de Mores is in fact the Duke de Valom bros^, Marquis de Mores, and the son of the Marquis de Mores who tvsnty years ago attracted attention bj fight against the beef trust, in country and who in lass its the de his this 1896 was murchred while he was leading a French ex] edi tion in the Soudan. The marquis entered Yale this fall without revealing the" fact of, his nble birth, and has been living quietly and simply, although, through his grind more are father, he will probably inherit monfcy than ali but a few men whe now in the university. He lives student apartment at No. 11 a JVall 135 0111 Street, and eats at the University mon. In fact, the young marqui? pears to prefer to be unnoticed neither in his actions nor his mot living is there any attempt at di nor evidence that he has more thin moderate income. The news thar he is a nobleman of France will coir|e as a surprise to his fellow students. ap and e of fjplay a Few women have had as varied^and existing a career as his m^heB? |She is he"daughter.4f J-.-AL 'Votei- Hoffnian, formerly ,a Wa'T 'ptiseet ^b'aAjk^ry who had large estate brt StatenvlsiaiKl in 1883, when the marquis won Miss Medora Von Hoffman's heart. Witl^ the backing of his father-in-law the marquis bought a large ranch in Nprth D'akota. where the Northern PaiciltC' crosses the little Missouri near'the Montana line. He built a small' town and christened it Medora, in honor of his wife,,. By the-.-courage, she displayed on various'occasions the mar^mse became known to the cattlemen as the "Oueen of the cattle range." But the plan to defeat the beef trust by shipping dressed'beef direct from the cattle range to the eastern markets was not a success, and in a few yekrs the marquis and bride returned to Paris. There he was involved in the Dreyfus affair and while he was at the head of an expedition in the Soudan in 1896 he was murdered by Arabs. By offering large rewards and keep ing everlastingly at the authorities the marquise, after two years, succeeded in tracking down the murderers of her husband and in having them punished. With her son Louis, her daughter and accompanied by her father, the marquise reached New York, Savoie, on Aug. 011 St. iPaul News: Alasj poor Yorick! Irt a rural churchyard, thirteen miles, from Asheville, N. C., lies the. grave of Edgar Wilson Nyei In the seven years that have passed Siuce his death the mound of earth has almost disappeared. Winter's blasts and summer's rain have almost leveled the earthen coverlet of the hu morist. No flowers grow in summer tiqie. Briers run riot over tfci! ipot and weeds grow luxuriantly, 'y Why this neglect? A "Bill" Nye made a great deal o{ money in the closing of life, but he was open-handed. He could not resist an appeal for help. He gave away almost as fast as he received. The only money lie left his estate w^s his life insurance. That money was deposited in an Ashe-' ville bank which almost immediately' failed. Mrs. Nye was compelled,to keep boarders to maintain the family. The struggle grew too hard for her and she returned to her western hoifce. Befote she left she had placed in 'Cal vary Church, in the cemetery of which Nye's body rests, a memorial windqw. Aids, poor Yorick! "I^UgHtef' is rifxt door to tears" and Ny$Vlife was^Wtjof soifow. fifed of d^r^llibn the worfi hfeyer imMw. His health was alwi pooir. L* the poor clotvn who, jt$.'&£fuh|[ hfirt, grithapes for ce. Biff ffwc wroW *ptty of Jft thitlif twten cl&tijS hung 'ivftis heim: He wi%t% Junior but the deep undercurrent ft was unknown or undreamed THANKSOIVINO PROCLAIMED. Oovernor White Names Day of Thanksglvift •hr s It gives that ricli vial nourishment which is life secret of all healthy growh. It rounds out the long lim#, and hejps chijdren to grw without using u|i ail th jr strength in growing the State of North Dakota. Governor White hasissued his Thanksgiving proclamation in the fol lowing terms: In accordance. With th^ «acred flus tom and our fathers and in conformity with the proclamation of the1 presi dent of the United States I do hereby name Thursday the twenty-sixth day of- November as a day of Thanksgiv ing for the state of North Efakota. In gratitude to the Father, who has. given-us the full measure of peace and plenty I do recommend that on this day we cease from our usu^l: labors and rende? praise and Thanksgiving for the many blessings we Wave received during the closing year. Given under my hand and the great seal of the state of North Dakota at the capitol at Bismarck, this twelfth day of November, 1903. THE OATS YIEL,D. Jamestown Alert: A ma^ifcwas on the depot platform yesterday telling I10WM30 bushels of oats wcro raised in Alberta to the acre, and talking about the big money to be made in that country. A bystander happened to know that the man who was doing the talking was formerly from ^LaMoijre County, that he had sold out, and gone to Manitoba and has been trying to buy back his Dakota land ever since but has been unable to do ^o having gone broke in Manitoba, where they raise "130 bushels of oats to the acrc." i. "ill MO —1 1 HOW'S THIS. "We offer |ioo reward for any case of catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last fifteen years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their firm. ... West~& Truax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, 'O. .' Wilding, Kinnan & Marvin,- Whole sale Druggists, Toledo, O. i Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken inter nally, acting drrectly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sept free. ^Price $25 -i,5 Uegt to ere6H 4 Frank White, Governor^' By the Governor. •. E. F. Porter, Secretary'of State. THE NEW OMAHA SHORT LIKE Of the Chicago Great Western Railway offers two finely equipped trains daily between the Twin Cities and Omaha, for Denver, Salt Lake City, San Fran cisco and all points west. The Day Ex press is the best train for Austin, Mason City, Fort Dodge and Omaha. For further information iapply to. R. R. Jones, traveling agent, Fargo, ,^1. D. r. s'i LICAIT ^bNtfS* E\T??fINO. «JT(1VEMBl5B -23,*11903. ,75 $140 $200. the 14. After a visit in Newport and seeing the young mar quis started on his college course the marquise journeyed to Medora, where she had spent the first years of her married life, and has just returned from the west. This is hc.r first trip to this country since she left with her husband after the failure of the rapch ing experiment. r 1 1 iiv.i,, nil, i.,, 1 BILL NYE'S GRAVE cents per bottle. Sold by all druggists. Hall's Family Pills, aro-tlie best. WANT D. BRED. HORSES. Valley Gily Times-Record: ,• Charles Wf Betts. representing the_.w6H known Midway horse deajers, Barrett & Zim merman, has been in the city for two weeks and leaves tomorrow with a car load of horses which he has purchased in this county. The horses which Mr. Betts has purchased weigh 1.600 pounds and over and the price has been from a head to more than The' carload represents an in vestment of about $3,800 which indi cates that the average price was about $190 a head. The buyer stated that lie had been purchasing horses for eight years and finds the North Dakota bred horse the best for the woods and brings a better pricc than horses from Iowa and the southern states. Horses bred and raised here arc acclimated to the winters and can be shipped at once to the lumber camps without danger of sickness. The northern bred horse is worth more than the southern animal on accotuit of being able to stand the northern winters. The farm er should get the best sires possible and wifl find'that it Will pay to turn off a few head of good heavy hor$c$.raided Urthis state' each year. V •!l 1-lORSEHAIRBRlDLlt Jamestown,.."! Capital: ..The Dery Goodrich bridle case is- 6f interest for it brings into' question the raffles of one thing,' or another frequently held. Ijn this.case, Mr. Goodrich was one of the arbiters .of the award of-the bridle to Dery, so testimony showed, and the bridle was held by Barber O'Brien un til a certain order signed by Dery au thorized him to deliver the bridle to Mr. Goodrich. A few words at the close, of this order said the person lentiohed in the order to receive the ridle would look after the "beer"—or words to that effect. But what that is made the visitors in court smile. The defense contended in argument of legal joints that the bridle was tainted, in »s itittch as it was secured by Dery iti th' illegal manner, and cited an authori ty'to stistain its position. The plaintiff Contended that though the bridle may have been so secured at One time the ownership of Dery was acknowledged by defendant when the signed order of Dery f&r its delivery was secured. This point was -argued at length by th$ at •tortieirfe." llie cdurt di$ 'hot pass uppni the tillfc toihfe brldl^vit' is'said, rf The "ntdti'on t6 df^'ihiss (of. wrj/?£, ivvtHMpfur', $ o a w a y •fv .l i'V- MARTIN HBCTOB, President N. A. LB WIS, President. the de- jfettse Was overruled by the court, lj|h.it is4 ^.#jrstobd it might eptir a On the further hear l5ec. 1, &hen the defense, will have An important witness, said to raveling nian who accompanied odrtch to Mont pelier, wheu he e Dery order, order read?: Iyer the bridle if thf: Itcket it to J. W. Goodrich and he will 1, to the beer. Louie Dery. Oct.f »V I Ir is dated a day after the Goodrich as oi^e of'j Amateur cooks have good luck with Falcon Pancakes because the recipes are so simple and no yeast or baking povrder/ is used. Falcon Self-Rising JPancake Flour is packed in two pound packages and six pound sacks, and is an e#onomical food because it is unusually substantial. The wheat, corn and rye combination makes idea! all-the year-round pancakes, muffins, gems and other easily pre pared breakfast rations. Winter or summer, here ia a good Pancake Recipe To two cups Falcon Pancake Flour add enough milk or water to make a comparatively thin batter, or use two cups Pancake Flour, two cups milk, ono tablespoonfu! sugar or syrup, one egg have griddle hot bake most after turning. Falcon Pancake Flour at the Best Grocers* SHANNON & MOTT COMPANY Millers of Falcon Pure Foods, Deo Moines, la. It takes knowledge 2ts well as drugs •it •., r. to properly fill prescriptions in a driig store, and on the degree of knowledge depends the degree of value of the prescriptidn. Fout & Porterfield Wholesale and Retail Druggists LUMBER DEALER Corner Front and Elovonth Stroote, Fargo, N. & FABOO BANKING HOUSBJS. J. deLBNDBBGUtt,' Ylee-President. FARGO NATIONAL BANK SAFETY DEPOSIT BOXES FOR RENT w rranucta i| Ofneral Banking and Foreign Excange BniloeMl^ Drafta, Dra^rn Direct en All Principal Cltlee of Karope. 0, O. BARNES, Vice-President. ... a .. A.V, -AiL. E.S.LBW1S, Pye«l4«nt. fff nam 0USTUO $ i| v a o N I 4®#® sfi 1 h. I WALL ^-1 1" •mi' 1 y.'V '*W. O. MAOTADOBR, Oaibier. IJIEBCTQEB.• &. v##JN'*/&'•' fcAEtiW H10TO8, O. i. deLUMDBlSOlE, •.«. WB1QHE, GBO. B. ItlOHOLS, W. U. MAUFADDBN. H. W. GUAB^I^ Cashier. themerghants state bank OF FARGO (CAPITAL PAID IN $100,090.00 DIRBGTOBi. ,4' O. a. 9AENB0, B. W. QBARKY, J. E. CUONAN» I. N. WBAL N. t. M. HBM'l-Oll, VttOMAB BAKIfitf, JU., W. P. BALL, J. TU. McOOWftBLJL., ALBX STERN, B. I*. BPALDINQ. ). WATSON, Vice President* OF FARGO, NORTH D«g)TA CAPITAL AND SURPLUS a. A.PEBtt, 3. B. WATfON,J. IL J. A* MOMMOMEBT, J. W. VON mil y.'iw' •JR W&RY W/A Eft al- ii? K 0- (I 1 r. SPALDING, Attorney. I W. YON N1BDA, Oubtee. r. A. IBiBM Oaillekr 1' i fl'l