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It pTKe Fargo Forum jj And ©clSi? 5&c.-«blI©o«fc FORUM PUBLISHINQ COMPANY. its: Entei/ed at poafrofflce iuii second class "baa VOLUME XXXVII. NO. 165. Tho Fargo Porum and Republican Is Lpyblished every ovcniny except Sunday "n Ths Forum Building, corner of First &V@im© and Firth street north, Fargo, N. D. Subscription—The Forgo Forum and I*aily Republican, by carrier, 16c per week, or 40oper month. In advance $4 5p«r year. The Fargo Forum and *Weofcly Republican, $1 per year. Sin gle copies. 5c. Subscribers wtll And the date to which they have paid .^printed opposite their names on ionce th^ ud dress slips. Address all communications to The Forum Publishing Co., Fargo, N. D. WEDNESDAY. MAY 27, 1914. TRUE SPORTSMANSHIP* During the hilarious momenta of a Ibeaeban g»me when a crow| Is flllodt With an earnest Iesire to see the home 'team win, It iaexcusable, if the crowfl moa,r3 "kill .the umpire," following a tattose decision that went in favor of litlne visitors. That ldnd of an incident fls'one of the ife&tures that go to make jbaseball what it is. Tho umpires ex ect it. and it they are good umpires merely cfoa» their jaws mora flvmly and keep right on calling the dBcrlslona as they see them. rt'is also the usual thine at a base ball karae to let loose considerable wtfEtteTy. and-*4-ho opposing, players ex l^ect ajid freneraffy get a lot of good) Kstnreti.^nsbtn*:. Ail this Is to be ex-, tpeofted. ICs part of the game. Bat w?ien a crowd becnerwsi so bit Itady partisan that it attempts to in jure the -opfpnstng players by heaving e&oaes«axtd other things at them, there is sonuatfeing wrong with tho crowd That ktad of a display is muekerism of tho rankest kind. It is reported that this happened on a Northern league .grounds recently. It is mighty poor advertising for the -city where it ftaoporU). i Fargo an* Moorhead can take pride in /Che spirit that has been displayed *ut a31 the,games that have been played here this year. There are no more iloyal fans in the country than in the twin cities-of the Red River valley, ano they want to win just as intensely as do the fans anywhere. But whether the team is winning or losing, wheth er the fans think the umpire is falt er unfair, there has always been evi Idenl a spirit of fair play. An instance of this was shown in fchait Saturday game which the Grain ligrowers won from Winnipeg by a •score of 15 to lti. With the scorn 7 to 14 against the home team the Winnipeg center fielder made two sen sational catches that robbed Fargo of 'jeonio scores, in both instances the *crowd showed their appreciation of !*the clever play by giving the player •«a "big hand" and when he came in i-at the end o£ the inning, the crowd more cheered him to the echo. One of the biggest factors in making [•tho members of the local baseball team, {(popular with the citizens of Fargo and JfiMTnoihead is the fact that every one of them appears to be a gentleman ey very seldom dispute a decision th an umpire, and their deportmenu the field has been ideal. This is the Fargo spirit. The city, ants a winning team, but it wants to win on merit. It wants its players1 "to be fair and square and to avoid, every appearance of muckerism. And. 'when the boys play the game dike men, [whether they win or lose, they will ihave the solid backing of the homo crowd. This is not a city of "short! •ports." I THE PENROSE VICTORY. The victory of Senator Penrose in the republican primary is not surpris ing, although the increase in the re publican registration, with the corre sponding falling off in that of the pro grresslves, gave hope that he might be •defeated by the return of the latter to (their former fold. His majority is more than double that by which Roosevelt carried the presidential primaries over Taft. At ther same time, he was evidently cut by a large number of republicans, as the vote for Brumbaugh for governor exceeded his by 40,000 or more. The result is to be ascribed to excellent or ganization. the lack of an opponent of popular appeal, and the inherent ten dency of a Pennsylvania republican to vote for the regular as against the in uBurjrent. On the face of the election figures of 1912, Penrose's chances in the election are nil. Roosevelt had a plurality of 6Q 000 over Wilson, and Wilson wa» ahead of Taft by 120.000. It is hard to see how any voter who balked at Taft could swallow Penrose. But there is no underestimating the force of the protection cry in Pennsylvania, and neither Representative Palmer nor Mr. Pinchot will be certain of defeat tag their discredited opponent in ad vanca. HE CANT. It may add to the gaiety of nations, %ut it certainly does not help to make it matter clear, to refer to the possi tbliity that Huerta will resign, or to [point out the fact that he. has refused !io resign. i Resign what, or from what.? i His case is net at all complicated. }He was trusted by the late lamented Resident Madero as head of the fed era! forces which were supposed to protect Madero and insure law and or 4fcer generally. Be organised an assassination par tly—to put the case without beating about the bush—and betrayed the man who trusted him and by whom he was employed. i He has a few of his precious cut throats—not many—about him yet. Shall he resign as central figure among these followers? Shall he re sign as the most conspicuous and Irre sponsible figure in the cafes of Mexico sp el elty? The proper sort of resignation will tfcke place, so far as he is concerned, When the constitutionalists reach Ijfpsico City—when, at the beat, he will be given a chance to get out of the? country. The leaders of the constitutionalists arc not particularly desirable, but the movement of that body is significant of the feeling of the Mexican people. And the Mexican people may be de pended upon to convince Huerta in good time what it is advisable for him to do. FRENCH FASHIONS SHOW SHORTER AND FULLER SKIRTS. It •S y v i i! tfT i S i 1, *. i Several of tho very newest fea tures are introduced in this cos tume, snapped along the Champs Elysees only last week. The short and wider skirt is one of the first changes of the early season. The tunic is short and plain in front, growing fuller and longer toward the back. There is the combination of two materials, the color scheme being brought out in the footwear. The skirt and jacket of this cos tume were made of black serge and the tunic, collar, and cuffs of "black and white striped material. The patent leather shoes had white uppers, laced and stitched in black. We might well ask. "why the fur tightly clasped around the neck?" While the day was not Warm enough to make the wearing of the fur uncomfortable, it most likelv was worn for the same rea son "that high shoes were worn in stead °f low ones—it completed the costume and gave the desired ensemble. The small hat. fitting closely to the head, nnti tilting at a smart angle, is still the. popular modfel. HOME IS WHERE THE HEART IS. To th« mother who sits in the twi-, light alone There comes a deep sigh of unrest. Like that of a bird in the fall of tho yea That sings to an empty nest. She sighs that the harvest of life is Thatcher work for her children is For'th.e sweetness of life that ebbed slowly away As they left her one by one. With folded hands as the night comes on, She sits by the open door, Wnti'hing in dreams the faces aglow As she saw them in days of yore. There was Nod, the first-born, noble and true. With his father's stature and face, And Alice, light-hearted, whose laugh sent a ray Of sunshine to every place. Then Robert, the thoughtful, and Reu ben. his twin, And Henry,' their studious boy, And Ruth, the musician, whose sweet, happy song Filled the hearts in the home full of Joy. Then Bessie, the wee one, who ruled all the rest With her innocent, winsome way. Twenty years she was "baby," but now she is gone— The bride o£ a week and a day. "There are none In the home now but father and I." She moans in the deepening gloom "The bright happy faces I see in my dreams Are but shadows about the bare room. Soon we. tqjo, will leave the once happy home For another that's brighter than this. There to gather the children back one by one* In our arms for the good-morning kiss. Then a day like ihe old days, with the circle complete. Will dawn under heaven's bright dome. If we find when the archangel calls the long roll That our children are all at home. That Robert and Reuben, Henry and Ned. Ruth, Alice and Bessie BO fair. Are gathered about us. ah. then we shall know Jt. is home, for the children are there. —Mrs. S. M. Wright, in the Christian World. BELATED GRATITUDE. Late Recognition of Man Who In vented Cold Storage. Cleveland Plain Dealer: Charles Teller, the inventor of cold storage starvd to death in Paris last October, He had pawned all his property and at last perished literally from lack of food. Shortly before he died Teller was presented with the decoration of the Region of Honor, but this was not edible. After his death the government slip ped a 1,000 franc note between his cold fingers and gave him a fine funer al. France has now completed her measure of generosity by having medal struck in his honor. Teller left an invalid son. The young man, now 22 years of age. will never be able to work. It appears that he might, for all France has done in his behalf, suffer a fate similar to that of his father. But the International Cold Storage corporation has proved more generous than the nation. It has collected 110, 000 francs for young Teller, and all but 5,000 francs of the sum was raised in Argentina and Uruguay. With this to fall back upon the son of the man who did so much to solve the prob lem of the world's food supply is not likely to die for lack of food. The Teller case is interesting, not beause it is typical, but because is is almost unique. The French are the most generous people in their appre ciation of services of their fellow coun trymen. No other nation presents so many medals and erects so many statues, and none is more eager to give material aid to those who have achieved greatness. Teller was mere ly forgotten. North Dakota Kernels The contract has been let for a new school building at Gladstone. Crop conditions, now, about Tolna, Nelson county are satisfactory. Don't overlook that little but lftt- portant item of hall insurance. Col. M. A. Hildreth, of Fargo, will make the Memorial day address at Mayville. A beautiful school garden at Churches FSrry is one of the attrac tions of the town. The name of the Johnston State bank at Marlon has been changed the Marion State Bank. The Old Settlers' association of Richland oounty will hold its annual meeting at Wyndmere, Jun« 18 and 19. At a plowiag bee southeast of Litch ville twelve plows in action turned over 80 acres of stubble during the day. A rare specimen of a petrified stump, from the Bad l^ends, adorns the front yard of St. Joseph's hospital at Dickinson. The plant of the Dickinson Fire and Pressed Brick Co., is working at high pressure. Ailing orders for the west, and points in Canada. The editor of The Litchville Bulletin makes the following political forecast, that A. P. Hansen of Barnes county will be the next speaker of the house at Bismarck. Bernt Anderson is again a candidate for the legislature from Churches Fer rv. He is considered a good man for the job. both for home constituents and the state at large. One farmer at Milo, Rolette county, •quietly went to work and planted forty acres of corn, greatly to the sur prise of his neighbors, who considered him very venturesome. A Dickinson man recently left Roan oke City, Va., at 6:30 one Saturday morning, and the following Monday stepped off the train in Dickinson at 2:25 p. m., after covering 2,000 miles in round figures. Stark county has 4,440 school chil dren for whom the school authorities will receive. $13,675 from the state ap portionment fund, the city of Dickin son has 1,231 school children, for whom it will receive nearly $4,000. Cavalier County Republican: Corn and potato planting was general this last weqk and the county will greatly increase its corn acreage this yea?. Many would like to plant a larger acreage of potatoes if good seed were easily obtainable. Parents Day is a feature of the clos ing school days at Churches Ferry. It was established a few years ago, and much good has been accomplished, as on that day the parents visit the schools, and view the work of the chil dren during the last year. Improvements at the Dickinson cemetery are attracting a great deal of attention. Much good work has been don-3 by individual lot owners, under the inspiration of Miss Crowl, the en terprising daughter of the president of the cemetery association. Frank Kihm. who was popular as a hotel man at Dickinson in the early nineties, died a few days ago. He was one of the early settlers at Bismarck, and was prominent in the freighting business from points on the Northern Pacific to the Black Hills. He was born in Milwaukee, Wis., fifty years ago. People at Portal and vicinity will be busy the end of the month. The coun ty high school declamatory contest will be held at Portal, Friday evening, May 29. The field and track meet at Bowbells Saturday, May 30, and the pel ling contest at Flaxton, Friday evening, June a. The 1914 class of the Dickinson high school will number fifteen young men and women. The baccalaureate ser mon was preached by Rev. J. C. Mor rison, May 24. Commencement day is Friday, May 29. when the address will be made by President Crane of the normal school at Minot. The Minto Journal: The rain on Tuesday did all kinds of good. Not that the ground was really suffering for moisture, but the crop is pretty well in, and the moisture came along as a "booster" and the result is a surprising growth. Fields turn green almost in a night and the growth is started in splendid shape. Senator McDowell addressed gathering of farmers in the interest of building a new school building in Pearl Lake township, southeast of Marion. He gave one of his fine talks on the school situation in this great state, and told the farmers how they could build a new school at the very best advantage, a subject on which he is an apt authority. Mayville Tribune: Already cars of horses and equipment have gone for ward on the Soo, and work on the new extension west of Plaza is beins started. The Soo will build this year across the reservation and into Montana. An immense bridge will span the Missouri and once this important engineering feat is com pleted the construction work west ward will move very rapidly. Wyndmere Pioneer: If present plaits mature a nursery is to be started near Wyndmere which will be in operation next spring. J. A. Morgan of Ken yon is the prime mover and local parties are Interested in the plan. About 1,000 evergreens have already been sent here from his nursery at Kenyon and set out by N. O. Bondelid as an experiment. Here's hoping the deal goes through. This should be a desirable location as shipping facili ties are the best and the demand for nursery stock in country nev er was greater. The Dickinson Press: Asrreat deal of rain fell in places on Sunday. Hail was also reported in certain localities, but the crops were not far enough ad vanced to take any injury. People from west of New Hradec say that they scarcelv ever saw so heavy a rain. Around South Heart the water came up very fast and travel was al most impossible for a few hours. East of Daglum a great deal of rain fell, and W. R. Everett, who returned Wednesday from the old Mead ranch, says that there was a heavy fall of rain in the Cknnon Ball territory. Dr. S. W. Bailey went to Halliday on Sunday and could not return until Monday night and then via Tfylor, on account of the high water in the .streams.' THE FARGO FORUM 'ATtTf fiATT.Y ^Tl?tTBLTCAlf. WEDNESDAY EVENING, MAY 27, 1911. The 8parks Enjlw I "lulldinfl Castle* to Horticulture WHS thoroughly discuss ed at a recent meeting of the farmers' club at Ellendale, near Hope. The operahouse at Neehe is furnish ed free of charge to the Neehe mili tary band for practice purposes. i Editorial in the Boston Globe: It JS the concensus of opinion of some of the keenest and most farsighted men that the United States is entering on an era of prosperity that will com pletely overshadow even the great periods of business prosperity that have already come to this country since the Civil war. They assign many sound reasons for this predic tion. The first—and the one which is the most significant to many of them—is that we have gone through a season of business depression for the first time in our history without a panic The old time speculators who could always scent a panic and make money out of it are completely confused. They have seen' a financial state of afliairs never before known. They have seen the banks full of money during a business depression and no particu lar call for the money on any side. They have seen Europe throw back into this country from $250,000,000 to $300,000,000 worth of scurities and have seen these securities absorbed and the gold sent to Europe without any particular fuss. That would have meant a panic in the stock market at least a few years ago. They have seen a tariff enacted low er than the Wilson tariff and yet they, have seen raw wool, one of the best tariff barometers there is, sell higher than before. They have seen a delicate railroad situation, that would have created a financial panic at any time in the past, studied and pondered over in a way that has simply taken the breath from speculators. The people have re fused to bcome excited over it. They want it settled everywhere, but they want it settled right. Why? Because, the railroad industry is not the one dominating industry of the country any longer. While finan ciers have been juggling railroads the past twenty-five years business men have been building up other great in dustrial enterprises all over this land. This is a bigger country than it ever was before. Its potential possibilities are being more and more realized in every direction. The farmers have bcame scientists and the arid lands and the swamp lands are being re claimed everywhere and being made to yield in such abundance as was You and George Washington. Bernard I. Bell in the Atlantic: You and your ^rcat-sjreat-grandfather are not very. different the one from the other, save in accidents. You may not. eat with your knife as George Wash ington did you wear neither knee breeches nor a powdered wig when you get a fever you are not bled you write your "s's" above the line, and not so that they leofc like deformed "f's you think and talk in the patois of the highly organized society of the twentieth century, not in the vernac ular of rural Virginia In the eighteenth century. But, after all, you and Col. Wash ington are about the same In all points essential te humanity. The same pas sions rule you the same needs impel you the same sort of mental and physical equipment reacted in him upon your environment. The only dif ference between this age and any aga that has gone before, ia a difference in acicdenta, a difference in environments. I t' AJ# ft f- K Daekiys Bedtime The Story UlUI V The Spsrlu had been quit® chilly for a few flays and not so much like spring. Daddy thought it would be suitable to tell Jack and Evelyn a story about something warm. The children were both sitting In front ot the Are in their room when he came In. "I think I will have to tell you this evening the story the fireplace sparks teld once to two little children like you who were sitting in front of the fire," daddy began. "The sparks knew that the children often wondered if they hadn't some story to tell, as they danced and played about, having such a good time. And, sure enough, the fireplace sparks began to talk one evening. Tou think we have such a good time,' they said, 'and we certainly do. But you needn't think that when we jump out on the rug and when your daddy quickly steps on us we enjoy that. It is always a big mistake wh®n any of the sparks fly out, for we have such a good time within the fire. 'You see, we can play all sorts of games. We play tag. I am sure you have often watched us play that, haven't you? We play blind man's buff. And the way you can tell we are playing that is by the colors. When one part of the fire looks as if it were going out and the other part Is full of bright flames, .then you may know that it is blind man's buff that we are playing, for the dull corner is the blind man, who is groping around, and we •re the sparks that fly where he can't reach us. 'Then we play hide and go seek. And the way you can know we are playing this game is by watching the sparks in the fireplace. We all cackle and make such a lot of noise when we find each other in this game that there renlly is no mistaking it, and, of course, as we go about the sparks fly in all directions. It is in this game that we often fly out on the floor by mistake. Then we are stamped on and are out of the game. 'Perhaps what we enjoy above all things is to make castles and palaces and houses. We never want to keep them long, for we are so full of ideas that we no sooner get one perfectly beautiful palace built than we think of another kind we can build. 'We think that maybe we have not put enough courtyard to our last palace and that the queen of the palace will not be satisfied. So we start all over again and build an entirely new one. "'Then on a cool spring evening, of which there are many, we give great pleasure to all who sit around us. In the autumn we are delightful, you will admit, and so we think we are useful and beautiful. In short we think very well of ourselves, but then yon know you don't mind that, as yon will admit you like us.'" CLEAR THE TRACK! TJJ loia k -T® never known before in the history of farming. In the South malaria has been con quered and the rich swamp lands are no longer the terror they were. Irri gation and dry farming have brought new prosperity to the west and south west. Water power is being conduct ed over wires hundreds of miles wher formerly it was all but wasted. The oil lands and the mineral wealth ha-vt burst the bounds of former monopo lies and opened up vaster possibilities than ever before, and the inventive genius of the American has never been idle. New miracles are daily being wrought by invention. Why then have we had a business depression in the face of these things? Simply because a great many people thought we ought to have it we should have it and must have it it was due. It was largely a mental state. There was no real need of it, or for it. Busi ness men see that more clearly now. But many of them are more satisfied apparently because we have had it. And they have learned something. They have learned that you cannot have panics unless there is "tight money"—unless the reserve is tfed up, as it was for the past fifty years— tied up when it was most needed. This business depression we have been through has been valuable then in that it has demonstrated to all the people the wisdom of the present sys tem of a flexible currency. The old conditions have disappeared forever. As A. W. Douglas of St. Louis said at the Economic club a few nights ago, there has been a curious psycho logical phenomenon during this busi ness depression—the people—the com mon people—have been optimistic through it all. They left their money in the banks. The common people had more confidence than the so called financiers, and when the common peo ple have confidence y.ou can't have panics. So now that the lesson has been learned, and that the greatest crops In the history of the cpuntry are in sight, it is up to everybody to forget the mental depression, start in quickly and get aboard the prosperity train that has been simply standing still on the tracks waiting for the engineers to oil up for a long run. The great, essential things of life are the same in all generations. Turn About Fair Play. London Answers: As Sandy holed out on the first green,- We friend from over the Border asked.' "And how many strokes did you take?" "Eight," replied the Scot. "Ah," said the Englishman, "I took seven so that's my hole." The Scotsman ventured no reply but when on the second green the Englishman repeated his former ques tion, and made Inquiry as to the num ber of strokes taken by his opponent, the latter nodded his head, and, with an exxpression of infinite wisdom on his face, gently murmured: "Nay, nay, my mannie it's my tur-rn to ask first.'' laii this time 1 TH€ ALPINE SINGERS AND YOQLERS. IRECTOR OTTO FIECHTL ie bringing to Chautauqua this sea son his world famous singers and yodlers from the Tyrolean Alps. They will render two of their inimitable programs of folk and yodle songs. They will appear In their picturesque Swiss costumes, the most attractive of all Europe. This famous com pany will be entirely different from any heretofore appearing here 4£d will command universal favor. They are artists of the first grade. ERUPTIONS ON YOUR FACE OR BODY Dry, moiet, scaly tetter, all forms of eczema or salt rheum, pimples and other eruptions come from humors, which mav be either inherited or ac quired through defective digestion and assimilation. To treat these eruptions with drying medicines is dangerous. Ask your druggist for Hood's Sarsa parilla. It helps the system discharge the humors, and improves the diges tion and assimilation. It goes to the roots of diseases. Get it today.—Advt. GET YOUR TALK STRAIGHT BLUEJACKETS AND MARINES ARE NOT THE SAME BY ANY MANNER' OF MEANS—DUTIES ARE VERY DIFFERENT AN ANCIENT RIVALRY. Kansas City Star: Bluejackets are sailors, marines are not. Remember that! The two words, commonly held as synonymous by the lay mind mean radically different types of fight ing men. To call a bluejacket a marine is as wrong as calling a sailor a soldier, or a boilermaker a black smith. Sometimes both do the same kind of work with the same tools but they follow different trades. Aboard ships there is little love lost between bluejackets and marines. Each looks down upon the other as beings of a lower social grade. Each never loses an opportunity of be littling the other. To a bluejacket a marine is a "leatherneck," to a marine a bluejacket is a "fiatfoot." Both re sent the sobriquet the other has given them and sometimes it is taken as an Insult. So bo careful in your address when you meet one of either service. It is well to remember this: How to Tell Them Apart. The big tall fellow at Twelfth and Walnut streets with a red stripe on his light, blue trousers and three yel low chevrons on his dark blue blouse is a marine. Tho men in dark blue shirts, with sailor collar and tight" hipped, wide-bottomed trousers of the same shade around the federal build ing are bluejackets. They like you to know that. More marines may be seen around Main street and Missouri avenue. If you look at their caps you will notice they appear to be like that of a soldier. On the front, however, will be a globe in bas-relief with au anchor behind and scroll above. A bluejacket wears a flat blue, sailor's hat with the name of his ship in gold letters in front. When a bluejacket is promoted to be a chief petty officer, corresponding in rank to the noncom missioned staff officers ot the army, he wears a biue cap similar to the ma rines, but witha gold anchor diagon ally across the front and the letters "U. S. N." in silver. His coat is double breasted with eight brass buttons, and coat and trousers are the same dark blue, while a marine's blouse is dark and trousers light blue. Bitter Feeling is Old. Bluejackets in this day perform all the duties connected with the naviga tion of the ship and also the handling of the guns. In addition to being sail ors they must be competent artillery men, artisans and know the rudiments of Infantry drill. Marines have nothing to do with ship navigation. They are soldiers carried aboard ship for just such pur poses as the capture of Vera Cruz. They give a naval commander a professional landing force to enforce his nation's demands. Bluejacket* Railroad Time Table IIOHTHUKN PAUV1Q, $9 effect *5* 1914k Trains Arriving Krn*« tue Eatt No. 1 North Coast Limited. .5:47 p. No^ 3*. Nor. Pac. Express 6:40 a. No 6, 1'ucitio Coadi ii,Apic3s.o ia p. m. No. 7, Western nixpreas 7:JW p. in No. 9. Minnesota .6:So y. No. 113. Staples Local. Daily Except tiunaay.... .10:00 a. m. No, o. Ow No, y. Eastern Express No 148. Soutn Western. Professional t4 The feeling between marines and bluejackets is as old as history. In former days bluejackets were gener ally a pretty tough lot. If they weren't fighting an enemy they might turn and light their own officers. So some sort of a guard was needed. The ma rines were the guard. Also, the ma rines in those days were the main fifthing men of the ship and the bluejackets merely attended to the duties of seamen. Nowadays a blue jacket does the main part of ship fighting. Marines man only small guns. Formerly the marines were po lice officers of a ship and that did not make them more popular with blue jackets. 10:20 |*. oi. Daily Except Sunday 7:00 p. m. No. 13S, Casseltwn Branch. iiaily Except bunday 6:00 p. m. No lSt». Jamestown Local Except Sunday 7:gft p. m. Train* Golujt tfaat No. 2, Nortn Coast Limited. .1:04 a. jq. No. «. Atliuuiu iKXpre&s 3:60 p. m. No. express. Bleeper open 00 p. m... 10:45 p. m. No ti. Twin cuy tixpiosa... .9:42 a. nj. No" 10. Minnesota Local..... .# 0U a. na, No! 114. Staples Lucal. Dally Except Sunday 1:10 p. no. TcMiJits uoiug West. No 1 Nona Coast limited. .6:64 p. m. No" 8. Nor. Jfac. tixpress 6:47 &. in. No* 6 k'ac. Coast lUxpreaa... .o:2U p. m. No. i, Western Express 7:60 «, m. no laa. Soutn Western Daily Except Sunday.-. No 137 caaseiton Branch ially'EAcept Sunday .8:46 a. m. __ .10:06 a. m. No 1B5. Jamestown J^OCal P'f'.'y Except Suuday..... .6:69. 0). (illKAT ft Oil UKHM, u Is Effect Nov. 2. IMS, East Buuuu Trains. No. 113 Qrand Jboriio local..10*69 a. tt No! 2. Oriental i-imitea via BrecUenridge il:36 p. m. No. 4. Oregonlaa via lNargus Falls 6:10 p. n. •No 131 Moorhead Northern 6i'AH a. &. •No. 14, Local St. Paul via Breukenridge 7:45 a. m. No. 12, Local St. Paul via IPer&utc) Avails 7:55 a. m. No 10. Local via Breck... ...10:00 p. m, No. ao. Ked iuver Limited Via Fci'tiua it-alls.. 12:30 a. m. No. 29. Fast mail 6 u& a. m. West Bound Train!*. No. 0. Minot local 4:50 a. m. ilo, Limited Grand ForKa 8:10 a. m. No. 11L Grand Forks local., a:40 p. No. 1. Oriental Limited Via Qrand Forks 6 16 p. m, •No. !». Faruo Surrey line and Aneta 7 00 a. tn. •No. 341. Mixed Portland Branch 8:00 a. pi. NO. SI. Fact Mall .......... 2 U4 p. Trains Arriving, tTie up over night.) •No. 106 Miuot-surrey ana Aneta ?:46 p. m. No. 11. St. Paui-D'arjio local 5:&0 p. xn. •No. 13, St. Paul-Fargo lo* cai via Breckenridge.... 6:20 p. m. •No. 130, Noyes-Fargo local 9 30 p. m, •No. 3*2. Portland Braneii.. 6:85 p. m. •Except Sunday. CHICAGO. M1LWAIJKUSJB A ST. HA SIX.. Trains Arriving Prom East. No, 403 Mixed Train 6»4o p. m. Trains Going Bast. No. 4061 Jinn 2l asl Hlxed Train CmrMw DR.J.E.CAYANAGil,Osteopath Resident graduate ot the National School of Chicago. President of Fargo Sanitarium. 'Phone No. 680. Address 1329 Third Ave. So. Dr. A. P. Jahnstn SENTIST Office—797 N. Bread way Ball, Grave? & Wallace DENTiSTS, Over 1st Nat. Bank. Phone S6S*!* Office bours: a to 12 and 2 to k Office closed Saturday afternoons and Sundays. Phone 86S. BR. J. W. CAMPBELL Specialist. EiTB, BAR, NOSE AND T&ROAlfJ Edward* Bldg, {Pnrgo, sr. D. J. H. Rindlaub, M. D. Elisabeth Rindlaub, M. D. Martin P. Rindlaub, M. D. DRS. RINDLAUB, Specialist! BYE, BAR, NOSE AND THROAT. delendrecl« Blk., Op. W. P. Deput Fargo. .North Dakota. DR. iS^EN HANSON, Osteopath (^ate under founder o* Osteopathy. Pioneer Life Bnlliilnv. DR. H. W. ALLEN, OSTEOPATH {*raduat« of the American schooi cf osteopathy, Jtirksville, Mo. Acute and chronic diseases successfully treated. Spinal injuries and irregu larities a specialty. No. 321-23 de« Lendrecle Blk. Phone 611. FRANK L. ANDERS. Asso. M. Am. So. Civil Engineers. Mem. Am. Water Worka Association Civil and Mechanical Engineer Water Works. Water Purification. Power Plants. Valuation! Supervision of Operation. FARGO. NORTH DAKOIA. DETECTIVE AGENCY. MYRTLE SECRET SERVICE AGEN CY—Thoroughly experienced detec tives in all lines of investigation Phones T-S. 31# N. W. 1767. 3H Widlund Bidg. Grand Forks. N. A CH1TKOTS, HANCOCK hnVSk, AivwuTECTS, OF» flees Douglas jtiuiiuintf, lis Sroad* way, Fargo. .. 5 ACCUt.MXM', WALTER XtiuAisON CERTIB\LLr Public accountant., x'iiot., 112^ Third avenue bocrm, Fargo, N. D. UJbiALl I'AHLVHS, MELIN'S CliUtOjfuu 1 x\AiiLOHtf. tiuperttuous nair removed electrio scalp treatment 105 Broadway. Jf&onc 706. 1*HVMC1AN». DRS. BROWN, j^UKTUiN GRONVOLD, Pbysicians and burgeons. 10 to 12 a. n, i to and to p. m. Orfice btern Building. Puone 172S-JU Fargo, M. IX DR. J. i. D1LJLON, •HOMfc.Ot'ATtt.iO jfhystcian. uei^eikdl'ecie Block. DKS. JJ'. tt. iiAlLtiX fc Jilt, bpeciaiists, eye, ear, nose and throat, on:ice hours: y ro 13 and 1:35 to 6. offices In Stern Block. DRS. DARROW & WEiBLE, deLEND recle Block. O&ice hours trom it to 1 p. m. i DRS. WiLLLAM C. NICHOLS & AK thur A. Nlcnois, Pbysicians and sur« geons, Ub iioiit street. DR. J. L. SAVAGE, PHYSICIAN AND Surgeon, i?'ront street. J. W. ViDAJU M. P.. HOMEOPATHIC Physician and Surgeon. Edwards Block, .Fargo, N. IX i PIANO TUN EH AND TEACHER, Prof. Wm. Kllmmek, 714 8th Ave. So. Master tuning and repairing. Phone 1141-1* are quite frequently landed with ma rines and do the same work a marine has to do in such circumstanccs. Marines aro highly trained as infau* try soldiers and also light and heavy artillerymen. They are the most versatile soldiers in Uncle Sam's em ploy. They are particularly proficient in landing on hostile shores, breaking up street riots and skirmish warfare. Organization is Different. The organization of the marines is that of the army. Their total strength is about 9,000 men, commanded by s* major general, whose headquarters an» in Washington. The officers have the titles of colonel, lieutenant colonel, major, captain, first lieutcjiant and second lieutenant. The corresponding, naval titles are admiral, captain com** mander, lieutenant commander, iteu-. tenant senior grade, lieutenant junior grade and ensign. Thus a captain in the navy ranks with a colonel in the army or marine corps and a lieuten ant in the navy ranks with a captain in the other services. Enlisted men in the marine corps are called privates, corporals and sergeants, just as in the army. The navy has fifty or more grades oft enlisted men. The oaes most frequently mentioned in news storie$ are ordinary seaman, seaman, cox swain, boatswain's mate, gunners'^ mate, turret captain, quartermaster* electrician, yeoman (clerks,) machin ist's mate, carpenter's mate,, hospital apprentice, hospital steward. watej« tender, oiler, sailmaker's mate, magti at arms and bandsman. A nav« bandsman, while a part of the navj wears the aame clothes as a marine except that the marine's cap anu -«»1 lor device giveB way to a gold iyrili surchanged with "U. S. N." In silver. Bluejackets are also very touchy about befing called jackies." The* don'{ like the diminutive. .Tack tar and man of warsman, while not uwed ltt. the service very much, aro accepted* "Gob" and "gobshite" are the word* most used by the bluejacket in speak«\ ing of himself. A marine refer* tb himself as a marine or a soldi*f« v FOXY. "I do not wish for cash," said he. "An heiress has ho charms for me.".* He married wisely, I aver,— His wife's ma is a milliner Her father, on the other hand, Makes ladies' clothes to beat thfe band. —Milwaukee Free PreM.. Crude Calculation. Washington Star: "You will admfV that two and two make four." "Yes," replied Mr. Dustln Star. "Bt^flt if you're dfealing with millions yen* ought to make two and two produce fc very, qiuel?, l&raer total than