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y, 'v I t&. y \S-' .1 pr t- .-uv fi t!5 A it I v S^t !V. r+- 4 -A u a .... ..... CURTAIN 8:30 SHARP, Tuesday, Nov. 24 Mr. F. C. Whitriey presents The Queen of Singing Comediennes in A Comic Opera In Two Acts. By Stanislaus Stange and Julian Edwards. Beautiful Scenery! Magnificent Cos tumes! A Perfect Production! PRICES: Entire low^r floor..... & s SIXTY MUSICIANS. SOLOISTS: MISS JENNY OSBORN... .Soprano MR. LEOPOLD KRAMER.. .Violin MR. BRUNO STEINDEL 'Cello Seats now on sfile at Broadway Pharmacy. No person will be allowed to pur chase more than eight seats for each concert. Tickets must be paid for when ordered. Mail orders should be addressed to Alson Brubaker, manager Fargo operahouse, and must contain post office or express order to cover price of tickets. If purchasers wish tickets fprwarded by mail they must include in their remittance the cost of registering. When this is not done the tickets will be. held until called for. SCALE OP PRICES: Parquette and Lower Box Seats $2.50 Parquette Circle 2.00 Balcony and Upper Box Seats.......... 1.50 flattery (not reserved) ....,•: 1.00 CARRIAGE REGULATIONS. Carriages will approach the ttheatre from the west. After the concert waiting carriages (which will form facing the east on Second Avenue North) will, when called, approach the theatre from the west and leave .via Broadway. DRS. i SYB, EAR/NOSH AMD THROAT FARGO. N. O. JHCKJQN, MKKItANTTAipMi ST. S. MM0.S. Dclunca Lothrop Bi 'Vtiw s* justs ay. He it in New «.* »*v v *'.. .%.,'vjgl.60 t\ *. 1.00 .50 Entire Balcony ,1 Gallery Thaodora Thtmas Oreftastra Rev. tt. •©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•©•to ^2*30 CURTAIN 8:30. Thanksgiving Matinee ««i Evening lite riusical Comedy REUBEN in NEW YORK New Songs |v-J .Catchy Music Clever Co PRICES:-.. $1.00, 75c, 50c and 2x MATINEE PRICES:- 22fc: gS CURTAIN 8.30 SHARP. Saturday, Nov. 28. One Grand Concert by the Theodore Thomas V^fyTriajftwtfV' -ifa irHE I have been looking for somd': espec ial reason for Thanksgiving this yegf, and I have fouuci one where many might not expect. Some nineteen hundred odd years ago Jesus paraphrased the teachings'of the Bible as follows: Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, soul, mind and strength and thy neighbor as thyself. Still further elucidating the lat ter with the famous Golden Rule. Do unto others as ye would that they., should do unto you. I understand that the Christian re ligion is the only one requiring three for its enjoyment, God, man ana a fel low mart. But the common teachings of the church have laid great stress on the first commandment that man's relation to his fellow man have been over looked. "If a man say I love God and hateth his brother, he is a liar for he that loveth not his brother whom he hath seen, how can he love God whom he hath not seen?" A saintly man said recently to me: "Christ commanded his disciples to keep out of politics. 'Render unto Catsar,' etc. Would He do'so today when his fol lowers are responsible for politics How can we "Bear one another's bur dens and so fulfill the law of Christ," if we vote for the burdens? This super ficial study of the scripture is respon sible for the Golden Rule, being given no place in the business of politics. Our masters of industry and finance attend church ostensibly to worship God but they will not tolerate teachings that trench on their week day life. They will not even practice the mild negative of Confucius which so aptly expresses the passive piety of the Chi nese: "Do not do unto others what ye w o u n o a v e e o o y o u u put in daily practice, Wall Street's maxim: "Do the other fellow, or he will do you and do it quick." Now, all the signs of the times go to show that the cut-throat competitive system is weakening, that the dawn of the co-operative commonwealth is here^ which shall end the divorce of soul and body and make possible that whtaso ever ye do, whether ye eat, drink, or labor, all may be. done to,-the: glory of God. The principle of combination and co operation is world-old being the fun damental basis of creation and orderly society. All our disturbances come from its perversion or neglect. As Miss Willard pithily put it "Ev ery atom says to every other one, 'com bine,' and doing so, they change chaos into order. When every woman shall say to every other: and every worker shall say to every other, "Combine," the! dragon shall be slain, the poverty viper exterminated the gold bug transfixed the saloon drawned out, and the last •white slave liberated. *'I believe that competition is Room ed. The trusts, whose single object is to abolish competition have proven that we are better off without than with it, and the moment corporations control the supply of any product, they combine. "What the Socialists desire is that the corporation of humanity should control all production. Beloved, comrades this is the frictionless way it is the higher way it eliminates the motives for a sel fish life it enacts into our every day living the ethics og Christ's gospel. Nothing else will do it nothing else can bring the glad day of universal brotherhood." When asked recently, if I were not discouraged about reforms, I said "Oh, no. The yeast I set for bread smells very little like the finished product, but it is necessary, nevertheless. So, the fermentation of present conditions seems, at first glance to bode no good, but the good is coming." To recognize the pres ent and have faith in the future is true optimism. Although our hearts arc pained by the revelations of rottenness in pub' lie officials, we value more the few brave souls who prove themselves above price! And we see how inevitable is the pres ent condition so long as private corpora tions exploit public utilities, using the profits so gained to debauch the peo ple's representatives. Even the political situation shows some gleams of hope. Though the cor rupt democratic ring rules New York |and the equally corrupt republican ring has conquered in Ohio still the man who, more than any other, stands fmf the rights of the whole people, Governor Garvin «£Rhode Island, was reinstated by the p&opfe whom he. serves. irWndous rate of-iticrease of the insane and* cYhnmate, we are comforted that such, Va^^ffittlpfroVed methods are being *usSd" ffr dtfalim^wtth unfortunates and. 'mairy most infested gee the necessity lof^oVer^rolir^^tnat economic system 'Which creates rfttich faster than any, provision can be made for their care. ile we are horrified that 6,ooo: wo mert annually enter the brothels of our .... 5eyM3h^hthsi of them forced yefty jht&ft life tff shame we re jjjbf their sisters are, selves with res-' in revolt against radation ri pick up, from :*I* .jiaa^Vknfc'.jftVH! FARQ0 m± PROGRESSION. Mrs. Ring Waited for Inspiration and Finally. Oot It. %Kenzie^ N P., '$py, ^—tjp -'ihe Forum: It is said that one always finds what he looks for or, as Elbert Hub-, bard puts it, "All things come Jo him who waits and hustles." ittfss WMttaker, a proiniiieiit club woiiiifti of Savaii^ffi^jdi, tells how she was entirely cored of ovarian troubles by thi nee of L^diaE. Pfoklmm'&Vege&tirie Compound. DIAB MRS. PimboAM:— .4w»rttty recommend Lydla E. Piskham's Vegetable Compound as a Uterine Tonic and Regulator. I suffered for four years with irregularities and Uterine troubles. No one but those who have experienced this dreadful agony can form any idea of the physi cal and mental misery those efidhire who are thus afflicted. -Your Vege table Compound cured me within three mooths. I was fully restored to health and strength, and now my periods are regular and painless. What a blessing it is to be able to obtain such a remedy when so many doctor's fail to help you. liydift E. Pinkhara's Vegetable Compound is better than any doctor or medicine I ever had. Very truly yours, Miss EASY WHIT-TAKER, 604 39th St., W. Savannah, G& 5 noq: is not the bit order, yet all "8 $Jiion forced upon Merch ske success ifc oper pro ta —$6000 forfeit tforfglnatof moovg tetter proolna gtnulntntts cannot protiuctd. The testimonials whicn we are constantly publishing' from grateful women prove beyond a doubt the power of Lydla E. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound to conquer female diseases* from this company at 3 cents a loaf, of the same size and quality commonly sold at s cents." The weekly visits of The American Co-operator bring fresh news of the conquests of co-operation in numerous ways and places in our own land., The issue of Oct. 31. substantiates all that Mr. Munsey suggests in an article', by Miss Halford, assistant secretary, •,In ternational Co-operative Alliance, jj K a a i n e FORTTM 'AND DAILY HEPTJBLICAN, TUESDAY "RVKXTNG K^EMftEU 24, 1908, 1 The reports of world wide vvowc are most encouraging, including one* item $50,000,000.00 worth of goods annually produced by British co-operators Tmder greatly improved conditions. Brothers, join in glad Thanksgiving. Praise the Lord by righteous l|va«g Throne the modern graces three, Justifce' 'Love, Equality. |-KJ •. i JOE'S BATH. Kensal^News A. G. RandalLand'Jott Fields drove to, Arrowwood rLake one day last week equipped with guiis' and skates. We mean, of course, the kind of skates that yotr \Vear'oit j^'our feet for for the purpose of sliding, slippijig' df gliding over the frozen and more of* less glassy surface- of a lake, portd* stream, or mudhole as the case may be or, if the skatestget too fast for the wearer, they are very useful in cutting artistic and peculiar holes in the atmosphere. The boys carried their guns for the pur pose of defending themselves from the monster which is said to inhabit the lake and the branta conadensis of which large number have been inhabit ing the lake for some time. Arriving at the lake the boys adjusted their sKates and sailed forth. Almost immediately Joe discovered one of the branta cana densis resting quietly in some open water near the center of the lake and made a race for it, forgetting in his ex citcment that the ice was perilously thin, and just as he pulled the trigger of his gatling gun the icc gave way and left poor Joe in." danger of collecting an interest in a watery grave as he sadly contemplated' the, ever increasing velocity of the flight, of the branta canadensis as ti soared far away o'er the hills and he talked to himself sarcas tically because he did'not provide him self with a pair of, wings as well as a pair of skates. Randall managed heroic rescue, the, drive home-was made was unusual speed, some summer uiy derwear was put requisition and the hioble Joe passed the balance of the aft tcrnoon in holding ~hiinself and various a. t,e--« warmth of W. G. Tubh's hard coal fire, his mind filled" Ayith pleasant. memories^ of the dear old summer-time. -r+ U .K doctor's some qvw.k i -T'tW' •You may wait foi it or ft^-as you- pleas j/Jp either yaw impend on us ^di capful 4^ifon, t«ctel|^i^e|rescri^p ^earIiest mom«nt possible. te SAW MAJOR AND THE FLAG. ftUler Edward* Met Old Thaa Frleads PMp Sauth Dalcate. 1 •'CL'.-.X} 'V''?'" ArtHiir Linn, an old-time fMident Bisar»arck in territorial days, afterwards chief of the Soldiers' Home in South Dakota, now editor of The Canton, S. D., Register, publishes the following report of a visit a few weeks since to Montreal by Co}. Greene, when the Colonel called on the M*ajor, Which the latter Will A PLEASANT EVENING^ -At the meeting of John F. Reynolds' Post, Nov 9, it was decided to, vary the usual programme somewhat by invit ing in several prominent citizens to give short talks to the post. Last even ing was the, first of these interesting events and the regular meeting was, closed early and Judge C. A. Pollock, Hon. Emerson H. Smith and Hon. F. J,. Thomson came into the room and each in turn spoke in a way that was highly appreciated by all who were pres ent. No public announcement had been .made of what was to occur, consequently those who only attend when they know of some special attraction missed one of the greatest treats the post has had for some time. "The Tragedies of Life, as Applied to the Soldiers of the Civil War'' was an nounced as the general theme, though the speakers had no intimation of it until the first speaker was called, yet each sustained himself well though Judge Pollock did accuse Mr. Thomson—who was the first to speak—of stealing his thunder, but Mr. Smith said the judge had played the same trick on him, so the honors were easy all around. Such events are liable to occur at almost any meeting of the post and the "entlar attendants are sure to get the benefit of them. THAT AWFUL COLD, And its terrible cough can soon fee cured by Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption. Try it. No cure, ao pay- 50c, $1. Fout & Porterfield.: NEW DAMAGE SUIT. Jamestown Alert: The^suit fpr^dam ages of J. A, Vandventer against Harold hfis been dropped, and a new suit commenced against the. same de fendant a«d two additional defendants, merchants of this, city. The ftrst claim. W?s for $1,000 damages and the last suit increases the amoynt to $5,000. At torney Baldwin, representing the de^ fendant in the first suit referred to the Business Men's Union of Jamestown as paaties who„ the,defendants claims, are admitted as responsible for jncitnjg the action against, the plaintiff and tliG merchants referred* to are claimed to he members of the union. Plaintiff Says the ^eat notoriety which the ca&b. •ht^rgipfif^haa injwi&d his reputat^it' and qrtdit a satisfaction Jfcppl$s from a car. Backus & Martif£ fi^fent the plaintiff in the second Wh^, in the jtidfi^s opinion fail& to do hls.diiity a'slllf law require$ W. 4IC44444+ X. 116 dbttbt be glad td feid Ih discussing''old tiWrts and events of years ago at Bismarck with Col. J. M. Greene Wednesday, who was a member of the last territorial legislature, we happened to mention, Major Edwards. "Yes," said the Colonel. "The Major is now consul-general at Montreal, and I had a pleasant visit with him last summer while traveling with the rail road cottinfissionefs. We were taking a drive through t,hat fafnous old city, and our. party, which included Governor Herreid, were feeling the effect of being among a people who had no particular love for Americans. I was thinking how good it would be to see old glory floating somewhere among so many Un ion Jacks, and just as we turned a cor ner, I saw, a little distance ahead, the glorious old stars and stripes floating proudly in the breeze, and I tell you it made us all feel happy. I never saw the Old flag look so big and so bright as then. I hkve seen regimental flags come up out of the battle smoke leading on to the victory, and that was a sight to thrill the heartblood of soldier, still it seemed that a sight of a flag in King Edwafd's country, where T,?5' for the, damage* sumined as he w&i ^e inM- will and tedtafnent of Louis F. no unlawful act. in the sale "of WbHBfs lUte o#tte,cttjr oi Waubott, in the THO§E ASHLEY CASES. Jamestown Alert Judge Lauder gotL a prosecuting attorney of hia di/t- .ntae6ti« ofcertain ri|l of the sanfc aiid f«4r 10^. A new attorney w^s 'WM:m 'otte, that Miiaadis yi. :J We had traveled so far without seeing one was something I shall never forget. At home we pay little attention to flags, but go out among a strange people in a strange country and see their national colors flying everywhere, then, more than ever, you long for a sight of the banner that is bringing freedom to the world. As we got in front of the house where the flag was flying, I told the driver to halt. 'This must be the home of the American Consul,' said Governor Herreid, and we left the carriage in a hurry and were ushered into the recep tion room of the consulate, and out came the great big hearted Edwards. When he recognized his visitors he almost hug ged the life out of us—he wept with joy to see old time Dakotatis. We enjoyed a pleasant visit with the big Fargoan, but he is not as heavy by 100 pounds as he was when he and Alex Mcken zie and Jud La Moure were figuring for division and for statehood.. He Seems to enjoy his honors -with becom ing modesty." 4 mands, although a year has elapsed. Andrew Schlabsz, one of the five men charged with the murder of Christ Rott at Ashlev last winter, was tried at Ellendalc, Dickey County last week and found guilty of manslaughter in the first degree. Rcidlihger and Schaefer, also indicted for the murder of Rott, will also be tried at this term, but Judge Lauder will' not preside, affidavits 6f prejudice having been filed. 'CITATION AND NOTICE. State of North Dakota, Counly *o£ Cassf ill county court, before Hon. A. G. Hanson, Judge. In the matter of the estate of Louis F. 'Wolters, deceased. Mary Wolters, petitioner, vs. Lawrence G. Wolters and Louis Wolters," respon-' dents.—Citation and notice hearing prpoi of foreign will. ,: The stajtiE of North-. Dakota, to. the aboyc uarn^d respondents and altjpersons interested in tne estate of Louis F. ,Wol ters, deceasetf: You and eaeh of you- are hereby noti that Mary Wolfars, the petitioner i.jhai filed ih tl^s court a copy of cfoun)^ of All&mahee ait4 state of Iowa, deeeasijid, and th^ probate thereof in the state of Iowa, duly authenticated', with her pftlHdn, prayi^'foffttie^adtftission to prohate- of said doct^neht a»- the last wilt'g taitf 4esetf|ed^uauid ^r the issu ttfc.h«*rof lettCUi'te^aft^Ury there on, aj«(i^t!iBjt' w* proofs of said will will be heard and WtMdMixd by this court 5|#n the mHi day ol -P.. in the fdrertoon of t( court rooti|S .6r' this cot day. at Bhx*, No Advance in Prices on' FLOWERS FOR THANKSGIVING Everyone will want a tew \Mrn. Pl«nts In Blooms i Chryitnthemufii^ Primrose*, »iA£ NORTH DAKOTA COLLECTION AOENCV 1 ROOMS 1 to 6 in the city 4fiy Out, and1 state ©f EDWARDS BUILDING. 'l'fl-fi-f WOOD! LIGNITE! WOODS My prices for fuel on cars at Fargo are as follows: Staaeoed Maple Seasoned Blrcli Seasoned Oak .. Seasoned Tamarack .. 9 7.1* per cord f.lO per cord y I.M per cord •.tl per cord Dry Cut Tamarack ... Mt per cord Lignite Coal iu-- cut flowers on the dinner table that day. •Ahd we wifl have a food supply of Chrysan themums, Roses, Carnation^ Hyacinths etc., etc. Lit us have your ofder promptly delivery. 4- to ^Our Motto: Good Stock and Prompt Delivery.} 'Phone 42. Broadway, Farjo. P. 0. Box 437. insure, w Five years ago the North Dakota Collection... Agency started out with one horse and two or-v. /,/ three hundred dollars worth of collections. handle half a million dollars' worth of paper ancff^l have a force of men on the road who cover th#^ i states of North and South Dakota and Minnesota! Our commissions last year were $21,000 they wilf^£ be considerably increased this year. This would^,, indicate that we make collections. We do not #1 handle real estate, insurance and half a dozens tft other things, but devote our entire time to handl- ing collections. We are in position to buy nogo tiable paper and past due notes and judgments, v •4 Look up what you have and come in and see usj*j'"- O. w. KERR, Seasoned Jack Ploe.. Dry Cut Seasoned Poplar Wblte Oak Slabs..... Pine Slabs ftJI per Ha These'prlces will apply to points west of Farfu, with proper allowance made far difference in freight from shipping points. «f Prompt shipment and full measure guar anteed. The bttolness of car lot buyers solicited. Address 7f L. B. GIBBS, tft Jf¥ '•n 1 $ 4if per cord 44C per cord i 4 JC per cord. 4M per cord Ml per cord .^liKvrand rorlle, N. DaR. PROFESSIONAL^' CARDS ATTORNEYS. LEW AltTHUK B., ATTORN BT XT' IiAl offices la Magill Building, Broadway at Front Street, Fargo. Practice* In i court*. TURNER, H. R., ATTORNEY AT LA? Offices In Bdwards Building. Broadwa Practlccs .ti all courts. BARNETT tt ItEEHB, ATTORItBn A Law-Offices: 4 and 8 Morton BultOlD Broadway. A. T,, LAWYER, ROOM8 19 TO 2 Bn.LFn.rtt.NBt All 40BIN80N. J. K., ATTORN/3I AT fjAf ... -, NBX A Vront Street,. VaifOk iVacUcee in a -*•. JCa* caata rVpeeiaity. P. iW. A.,'ATlMmit AS LAV Br«a i 4fiCfliT£Cjrs: -it,-' Km D. A. JsO'8 the »fcc.' .-PLAN! Booms: TMOT AN and d' Farg. AfitCtO'fiBC'F iikl'^CPRi Offlcea ft. P. Block, Braadwaj orth, jPargo, N. D. ABOBjlTBCm* Of .jto^padiMiPa wnsax