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i^fcaavefor $3 I ft v rS Chicago,! i ilwaukee & :v?SS5j polls, point aud eonth Aber Mitchell V St Paul R. R. TRAIN SCHEDULES, liM a.m 7:30 p.m. Citj tfargo-Ortonvi 1 le 1C ........ All service dally except Sunday. Sleeper from Fargo 7:40 p. m. arrives In Minneapolis 7:00 and St. Paul 7:40 next .'Uinrning. Kive nigh clnss and modern trains from 8t. l'aul and Minneapolis for Milwaukee AUd Chicago daily. The I'loNEKlt LIMITED, famous train Uf the world leaves Minneapolis 9 p. m. and St. l'nul t)::tO p. in. daily. This train Is a marvel of beauty and perfection. Ificiuipped with private compartment cars, first class standard sleeper with berth blKhor, wider and longer than those of any Other sleeper in America buffet drawing room smoker, free chair car coaches—em iiiK nil home comforts. •Vor tickets, full information reprardln rates to all points, reservation in sleeper from Fargo or on tne 10Kit LIMITED from St. Paul, see twill 1 it Degnan, agent, Fargo, or write W. Dixon, Northwestern Passenger Paul, Minu. -C TIME CARD TRAINS. »A»GO, N. D, ST. PAT! MINNEAPOLIS. DCTLUTH una points KAST AND SOUTH. •r To BUTTE :V' HELENA- v jSPOKANB SfcATTLfr v.,, TACOMA f,'jPC)VtTLAND CALIFORNIA JAfAN CHINA .ALASKA TOT BOUND No. 1 North Const Ltd.. No. S Pacific Express... No. 5,*6fe. Paul Local... BAST BODND North Coast Ltd.. Twin City Ex •St. Paul Local... St. Paul Express.. 'i"?' KLONDIKE Arrive* Leaves 5:15 p. in. 5:40 a. m. 6:00 p. 5:25 p. m, 6:00 a. 7 KX) a. lOHSi p. 7:10 a. 11:10 p. 8:00 a. 9:40 p. n 9:25 p. m. r.Va. w. BaAifok *Lis., LaM. & Edr *Edg., Lail. & Lis 7 K)5 p. m. Daily except Sunday -All others tlaJly. 8 :S6 a. ^esUbuled Trains Dining Cars i'aal and Ouluth Sleepers are Ran on Train E. Johnson, Agent, City OHica 65 Broadway Chas. S. Fee. Q. P. A., St. Paul. Telephone No, 65 (o) daily except Sun day others daily I p. VD. jsi:15 a.m. 10 19 p. ID ^|2) a.m. t.tr Tcwm it Ar. from "Flyer," Fergus Falls. St. Paul Barnesville, St. Cloud, 8 CO p. St. Paul o5 45 p. Wahpeton, Wiilmar, St. Paul Wahpetou.Wiilmar, Do lath, St. Paul Flyer, Spokane, Seattle and coast points Grand forks, andMinot :30 a.m. -y 00p,m. 4.-V- v :sr 5.10 a. m. o7:45 p, 16:19 p. m. HalBtad, Crooks ton and Dnlnth «8 -4K rr. ^iWiVot full particulars regarding lowest *TiteB, time of trains and berth reservations, «gli at city ticket office, 50 Broadway, or at depot. J. L. ROHAN, Agent. Genuine Comfort U tssured in the luxurious-Li* brary-Buffet-Club Cars and the roomy Compartment Sleeping s&M, on the ,, North western Limited i I" ill /*»The Train for Comloft" ever]! night betwcea Minneapolis, St. Pwl wd Chicago via Before starting on a trip—no matter where—write for interest ing information about comfort able traveling. fc^irao s BRIEFLY TOLD® IS NO USE LEATTNG FARGO1—BELIEVE THE STATE MENTS OF FARGO RESIDENTS Indorsements by residents of Fargo. Proof positive from Fargo peopled Cannot be evaded or doubted., Read this statement: Mr. K. H. Welsh, working on a farm near Buffalo, N. D., says: "Since liv ing at 103 Eiehth Street South, Fargo, I procured Doan's Kidney Pills at Wil ser's pharmacy. For a long time I not only was annoyed but actually suffered with pain in my back. Compelled to work at the time and aggravated by a cold contracted during the last attack I grew so stiff and lame towards the close of the day that I could scarcely walk. Mr. Collins advised me to use Sold for 50 cents per box by all deal ers. Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo, N. Y., sole agents for the United States. In the matter of the estate of Jahn Hendrikson, deceased. Martha Hendrikson, petitioner, vs. Magnus Hendrikson, Mary Liedman, Martin Hendrikson, Otto Hendrikson, Kate Hendrikson, Stina Johnson and Martha Johnson, respondents.—Cita tion Hearing Proof of Will. CITATIOI .- v .- -S S 32 p. m. Doan's Kidney Pills, emphasizing the kota, third vice president H. J. Wheel fact that he knew they would help me, and quoting his own experience as a good authority. I followed his advice, and my personal experience only re iterates what I have heard a good many express in and about Far^o. Doan's Kidney Pills are up to their representations and can be depended upon to cure backache, lumbago or any trouble arising from disordered kid neys." Remember the name, DOAN'S, and CITATIO^ State ©f "-ftorth Dakotay County of Cass. In County Court, Before Hon. A. G. Hanson, judge. v The state of North Dakota to the above named respondents and all per sons interested in the estate of Jahn Hendrikson, deceased/ You and each of you are hereby no tified that Martha Hendrikson, the pe titioner herein, has filed in this court a document in writing, purporting to be the last will and testament of Jahn Hendrikson, late of the city of Fargo, in the county of Cass and state of North Dakota, deceased* with her pe tition, praying for the admission to probate of said document as the last will and testament of said deceased, and for issuance to Carl Liedman of. letters testamentary thereon, and that said petition and the proofs of said purported will and testament will be heard and duly considered by this court on Monday, the 21st day of December. A. D. 1903, at 10 o'clock in the fore noon of that day. at the courtrooms of this court, in the county courthouse^ in the city of Fargo, county of Cass and state of North Dakota, and you and each of yoit are hereby cited to be and appear before this court at said time and place and answer said petition and show cause,"if any there be, why the prayer of said petition should not be granted. v:' 'v By1tlie conk,'. "&y' v 4-: /W. A.G, HANSOJff, Judge of the County CS|ilrt. jL. C. Johnson, .V Attorney for Petitioner., (Seal) Dated the r4t&4a&'of..Jfovefnfcer, A. D, ipaj., V. (D. Nov. 16, 23, 30.) St«1te of "North Dakota.' Couttty of Cass. In County court, beifore Hon. A. G. Hanson, Judge. In the matter of the estate of Anton Christopherson, deceased. P. O. Ingebriktson, petitioner, vs. Lena Christopherson, Albert Chris topherson, Annie Christopherson and Avaline Christopherson, respondents. The state of North Dakota to the above named respondents and all per sons interested in the estate of Anton Christopherson, deceased: You and each of you are hereby no tified that P. O. Ingebriktson, the peti tioner herein has filed in this count his petition praying that letters of admin istration upon the estate of Anton Christopherson, late of the township of Harwood, County of Cass and state of North Dakota, be granted to P. O. Inge briktson that the said petition will be heard and duly considered by this court 011 the 22nd da$r of December, A. D., 1903, at 10 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 petition 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. 1 Dated the 16th day of November, A. D., 1903. Arthur B. Lee,. Attorney for Petitioner. (D. Nov. 16, 23, 30, '03.)/:"::5- NOTICE TO CREDITORS. In the matter of the estate of Wil liam Carpenter, deceased: Notice is hereby given by the under signed Harriet M. Pope, administratrix of the estate of William Carpenter, late of the township of Page in the county of Cass and state of North Dakota dc^ ceased, to the creditors of and all per sons having claims against said de ceased, tcr exhibit them with the neces sary vouchers, within four months after the first publication of this notice, to said administratrix at the office of S. Shippy in the city 'of Hope in overn jtke county of Steele.. v HARRIET M. POPE Administratrix. THE EXPERIMENT STATIONS. Washington Post: With the election of officers to direct the destinies of the association for the coming year, the seventeenth annual convention of the Americai) Association of Agricultural Colleges and Experiment Stations, which has been in session at the Shoreham for the past three days, came to its formal end at 2 o'clock yester day afternoon, 'lhe discussion of tech nical subjects by the various sections of the association consumed the re mainder of the day. The officers elected arc W„ O. Thompson, of Ohio, president J. V. Houston, of Texas, first vice president J. C. Hardy, of Mississippi, second vice president J. H. Worst, of North Da er. of Rhode Island, fourth vice presi dent B. C. Buffum. of Wyoming, fifth vice president E. B. Voorhees, of New Jersey, secretary, and A. C. True, of Washington, D. C., bibliographer. 'lhe executive committee chosen con sists of H. C. White, of Georgia, chair man George W. Atherton, of Pennsyl vania J. L. Snyder, of Michigan 'W. H. Jordan, of New York and C. F. Curtiss. of Indiana. Pedagogic methods in applied science were discussed at the morning session, special attention being paid to the sug gested plan to offer graduate instruc tion in agriculture at some one of the institutions the association represents. The matter was referred to a commit tee. with instructions to select the best available plan for locating the school. Instructors will be supplied by the as sociation, and graduate courses, under its general supervision, will be offered next summer. The section of station directors had as its special subject at the afternoon session the soil tests recently made by the United States department of agri culture. Almost without exception the speakers criticised the methods used in making these tests, asserting that the analyses were not accurate, and, i:i consequence, that the results were mis leading. The convention of the association of official agricultural chemists was hekl in Columbian University, President R. J. Davis in the chair. In his annual address, Dr. Davis declared that the state laws regarding fertilizers were not enforced properly, and urged great er effort in that direction. In the aft ernoon the association attended the meeting of the station directors to dis cuss the subject of soils. The sessions will be resumed this morning, Many of the delegates and visitors to the convention left for their homes yesterday afternoon and evening, but others have remained for the purpose of sight-seeing, for which little oppor tunity was allowed while thc conwsction was in progress. V .. HAD A GU)f*I. .. IfbrkR Herald: List night a young man named Smith reported to the police that a man named Clancey bad pulled a revolver on him. Officer Doty was on the lookout for Clancey when he-started to mount the stairs at the Farmer Hotel on DeMers Avenue. The officer accosted his man in the hall way and Clancey made a move for the gun. It was lively for a time, in the narrow stairway, but when the bottom Was reached Officer. Do.ty was on top «nd had the gttii. Clancey was locked «P- .'i HOW THEY EARN THE PENNY Tha Ptojk of Paris Have Many Ways af Turn inga Penny. Golden Peftny: It is astonishing with what zeal means of earning an honest penny is plied in Paris. No city in the world has so many queer little trades by which those practicing them scrape together sous to make a living. The king of this class is, of course, the rag picker. He starts out before the dawn arrried with a lantern and a long-hook ed piece of iron, and explores the rub bish boxes placed outside every door in the capital before the municipal carts come to carry off their contents. Then there is the man who goes around with the spiked stick picking- up the cigar cigarette stumps which lie around the Paris cafes. There are men, too, who search the streets for fallen money, and who finally find enough to keep them from starvation. One of the most characteristic of these stranjre tradesmen is the dog barker, favorite dog of the Parisian is the French poodle, or "mouton," as he is popularly called. It is chiefly for his benefit that the dog barker exists. His headquarters are the banks of the Seine, the main body can be found at all times, though in the summer some go about the cily carrying on their occupation from jhouse to house. In the hot days one continually hears the long-drawn-out cry, "To-o-o-deur de chiens!" and meets the familiar figure of the dog barker, with his box of instruments slung over his shoulder. Many of them have their reg ular customers, whose houses they visit at stated intervals to make the toilet of these privileged poodles—for the Paris mouton is the "spoiled child""among dogs. He is clipped, brushed, combed, perfumed and generally has his "top knot" fastened with a pink or blue rib bon. Seme even jvear gold or silver bracelets round one paw. The result has been the development of the dog barber as an artist. He clips and shaves his costumer's dogs in most -elaborate fashion. Some are left with pokmn ^poti^®, movdaV EVMTtfft." snvmnmrt*. im. office .a "M n shaggy manes, with a tuft at the end of does what all the skill in the world can their tail,, to imitate a lion. Others again not do without it. Any drug that kills are flipped in strips, making Uiem look germs is a poison to you and it cannot be s n a like bbek zebras, and others ffave their faces clipped, and nothing but a pair of fierce rttuitache left, with fluffy bracelets of hair arotmd each foot. At any time of the day. as long as the daylight lasts, the dog barber will be found at work on the ban|{m^t.oa. a c§mp an The Smoke of the popularity of tne Cremo Cigar has spreact ffrbSi man to man from town to town from state to state until it is Renown and favored everywhere. & Vice Admiral Ito. Ito is sixty years old and has never been in America. Liquozone—liquid oxygen—is the only product that can kill germs in the body without killing you. No man knows any other way to destroy the cause of any germ disease. It is new to America, and millions who need it don't know of it. For that reason we make this remarkable offer. We will buy the first bottle and give it to you if you need it. We will do it willingly, gladly, to convince you at once and for ever that Liquozone does kill germs. We Paid $100,000 for the e rights to Liquozone for the United States. We tested this product for years in the most difficult germ diseaaes then we bought these rights for the highest price ever paid for a scientific discovery. We paid that price because Liquozone oyi taken internally. The best physicians, tht world over, employ Iviquozone alone for' germ troubles and any physician who doesn't, .is almost. germdiseaM. .. T, Just bxygeti. i* simply liquid oxygen—no 'jte it. Itisthediscovery Gemtau chemist, who t. His object was to An esccas af oxygen in staple CoVers the Country VISE TWO rros, JAPAN'S hope in heb present teottble, tfiiquestionably the two greatest men of Japan today are Viscount Admiral Yuko Ito and Mrtrqiilf? iifrbibtttfft tto. Hlrobunii Ito was four times premier of the country and the mikado's principal adviser, although he is at present out of The Largest Selling Brand of Cigars In the World. The Band is the Smoker's Protection. by reason of his resignation two years ago. He is sixty-three years of age nnd lias visited this coun try five times. He it is who is generally credited with the modernization of Japnn. Viscount Admiral Yuko Ito Is the chief of staff of the Japanese admiralty. He Avon A 50c. Bottle of Liquozone and Give it to You (o form into the blood that no germ could live in any membrane or tissue. Liquozone does that. The results are so certain that we publish on every bottle an offer of $1,000 for a germ that it can not kill. Yet oxygen is Nature's greatest tonic—the very source of your vitality. Its effects are exhilarating, purifying, vitalizing. But germs are vegetables and this excess of oxygen—the very life of an animal—is deadly to vegetable matter. We spend 14 days in making each bot tle of Liquozone, and the result is liquid oxygen—the best thing in the world for you, yet certain destruction to disease germs, wherever the Liquozone-laden blood goes. Germ Diseased. These are the known germ diseases. All that medicine can do for these troubles is to help Nature overcome the germs, and such results are indirect and un certain. Liquozone kills the genns, wherever they are, and the results are in evitable. By destroying the cause of the trouble, it invariably ends the disease, and forever. Asthma •bsoflM—Anemia Broochlttt Blood Poison Hs^r Fersr—Iaiuenza ney,*— verTroubles Disease 1 Trouble* *-Co4ah V o Jttarquis Ito. the great victory of the Yalu over the Chinese fleet. Admiral Dysentery—Diarrhea Scrofula—Syphifl| Dandruff—Dropsy Stomach Troubles 1, DyapepMa Throat Troubles Kczema— Erysipelas Tuberculosis 5 V Fevers—Gall Stones Tumors—Ulcers Goitre—tiout Varicocele Gonorrhea -Gleet Women's Dlsesssa All diseases that bet in wltb fever—all lnflam* mation—all catarrh—all contagious diseases—all the results of Impure or poisoned blood. In norvous debility Liquozone acts as a vttal lier, accomplittlilng what no drugs can do. 50c. Bottle Free If you need Liquozone, and have never tried it, please send us this coupon. We will then mail you an order on your local druggist for a full-size bottle, and we will pay your druggist ourselves for it. This is our free gift, made to convince you to show you what Liquozone is, and What it can do. In justice to yourself, please accept it to-day, for it places yon under no obligation whatever. Liquozone costs 50c. and $1. CUT OUT THIS COUPON for this Oder may not appear again. Fill out the blanks and mall It 10 the liquid Cumm Co.,m-raE.Kln£to8L»€liMaffo. fry dtSeSaelSw.: nsnwr twee nosoae. but If (zee I villi frT gjfe & 15 i.p-i «•*.