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Hies im I I#4l day ®|f!s SHf W-^ II HH SflSl BOY IfHE GENUINE SYRUP OF FIGS A. SrtnPAOTtTBHD BY. CALIFORNIA FIQ SYRUP CO. OrVWftB THE NAME. PBOFESiSlONAL CARDS. J. McKENZI BBAi KBTA.TB1 Wt) COIiI,BOTION8, TAXfi8 PAID_sWifNON»EE8IDBNT8. ,.X ,S0fl First National Bafik Block, Bismarck, N. D.: T. PATTBBSdi ATTOEifBT AT XAW, |t National Bank Block. OW3HBB, PHIlf BlttCK & COCHRANE, 3? lAW, liOANft AND BBAL- B8TATB, Fir «t National Bank Block.- ONE CENT A WORD COLUMN. I OST—Ladies silte open-faced watch—with ontgnard. jf 1 VOUNG men 0®^ catalogue explains our m^4m, special grand offer to teach the barber MsfefWd®' Mailed free. \Moler Barber College, Minneapolis, Minn. ANTED—A girl to cootk a houaowork. Small family. I .. ^Address Tribune Office. If J&felteif •••.. y**^vVV1 #®v and do general Best of wagetf^ THE CITY. dance at the A'the^eum Fri- 'tlraillf: General Hughes passed through to the west on the noon train. l?jlt R", B. Wallace -passed throijgn'to Mandan on the noon train. 'j/ Secretary of State Falley wept to Mandan on the noon train. Train No. 1 was run in two*fw®ihs today because of the heavy passenger traffic. fO® 7 -v Juage* Winchester yesterday^ ae g-t cided the suit of Glineberg &'Lovin vs. George Gussner, giving the plaintiffs vl-M* a verdict for $224.31. The suit was for a disputed balance for labor and H?" materials on the Gussner block. Lieut. Col. Philip Reade, Inspector II general of the department of Dakota, & was" in. ttfe city yesterday from St. Paul, examining the affairs §f Major Robertson as constructing-quar termaster in charge of, the new mill-\ .Q/fe tary post at this place. r' '"%& Mr. G. H. Henning, representing the Woodmen of the World, a fraternal in surance association, is1 in the city in /iS ^nterest of his fraternity. Mr. Henning was a resident of Fort Lin coin back in the '80's and has not been in Bismarck for nineteen years. ,^c, Mrs. Jessamine S. Burgum, who has been the faithful and efficient postmas ter of Conkling, McLean county, since sfc April 11, 1895, has resigned in favor !•:of Mrs. Dora Collis. The office will pr remain at the Burgum Woodside stock farm. Mrs. Burgum with her hus si band and children is spending the win f"i tex happily with, his relatives and IrlendB at Arthur, Cass county, N. D. Among the west bound passengers yesterday was Tom Kurtz, who will 5 be remembered by all old timers— ^specially that little band who were gtejiott the first train,to cross the Missouri river at Bismarck on the^ ice in 1879. Mr. Kurtz was bookkeeper for the con tractors building the road west and ,.. ,jmany old timers crossing the country ^'jfrom Bismarck to Helena in those early, 'days will remember the hospitality of the Kurtz mess car at the front. Mr. Kurtz is now in-the banking business in Montana and has been to Washing ton testifying, in the Clark contest •cas^H -IjSl&r-,, Pure, Bloga Jts the best defense AgainBt disease— pk^nd Host^ttei^s Stomach Bitters makes healthy b.ood. If you want to get' well, take it regularly. It will keep the bowels active and cures all such .etomach disorders as dyspepsia, lndl ^i,^gestion, sluggish liver, .weak kidneys, malaria, fever and ague See that a Safeguard ^gainst ^SipJjness W4 ®J3?1S4 Hosteiters Stomach Bitters. The agents for the Peopled Standard History havSTtlready sold twenty sets in the city and will finish their can vass today. Commendations of the work appear in anothe? column. Those who desire a good history should not ^|fail to avail themselves of this oppor "*m&ity to get one. »i' -k' -1-1. HOW IS YOUR WIFE? Has she lost her beauty? If so, Constipation, Indigestion, Sick Head Ifjache are the principal causes. Karl's -^Clover Root Tea lias cured these ills for hslf a century. Price 25 cents id 60 cents. Money refunded if re j^oalts are not satisfactory. BL 8. drnggiftt, Fourth street WSBXBSBM fra!^ rM Warden Boucher and Dr. C. A. Bal* lard went to Mandan on the noon •train- I^W-c Hon. Wm. Engleter, oft Morton county, is paying his Bismarck friends a visit today. The ladies of the W. R. C. will serve supper at the militia dance at the Ath eneum March 16. R. D. Hoskins, W. A.-»Dillon and J. A. Field went to Mandan on the. noon train to attend the Chapter meeting. y»n William McDonald of the reserva has bought the Arnold place,'near the Twin Buttgs stock ranch, for $1,100 cash. 00 Yhe ladies guild of St George'fc church will meet with Mrs. Dillon to morrow afternoon at 2:30 o'clock, in stead of with Mrs. Moorhouse. iis Henry Grambs has gone east to pur chase a stock of hardware for his Washburn store and "while absent will •ft® visit his father in Pennsylvania Among the features of the militia dance at the. Atheneum March 16 will be a cake-walk. The committee has i?' V?' ordered a handsome cake for the wln- mm STATEyNEWS^ The number^of cases of diphtheria at Mandan is increasing. 'iJjK Mrs. Flora P. Gates of F*&rgo ^ifed in the insane, asylum at Fargo. The Northern Pacific have just com pleted the largest pumping station on the division at Dawson. Edward Johnson and family of Fargo ate canned sardines and came near dying from ptomaine poisoning. The board of trustees of "the state industrial school at EUendale have re engaged all the instructors." The financial affairs Of the school are on a cash basis. •. ~u Senator Hansbrou'gh '^iaMoiig 6th6rs, received a vote of thanks from the na tional pure food congress just ad journfed at 'Washington, for—efforts in behalf of legislation—in that direction. Mrs. Thos. R. Morris of Fargo has filed a contest of the will of her late husband who died in the asylum at Jamestown. He left $35,000 worth of property to be divided between her and her children but specified that she should lose the property/should she remarry. She claimB he was mentally incompetent at the time he made the will. «v Joe Venne, who was a bugler in Co. of Grafton and with the North Da kota regiment in the Philippines, and afterwards traveled about the state with his partner,' Mr. Olson, exhibiting Philippine curios, is reported to have been married to Miss Rosie V. Green' at Portal, N. D. Miss Green is a daughter of Inspector Green of the United States customs office. The wedding occurred in St Mary's church. Rev. W. E. Sitzer, W. Caton, N. Y., writes, "I had dyspepsia over twenty years, and tried doctors and^ medicines without benefit. I was persuaded to use Kodol Dyspepsia Cure and it helped me from the start. I believe it to be a panacea for all forms of indigestion." It digests what you eat. E. S. Beards* ley, Fourth street WHAT DICKEY SAYS. ^%Jteut Gov. Dickey of North Dakota is in Indianapolis visiting his son, Al fred, E. Dickey, after a protracted stay in Puerto Rico. Said he: flllpy "The tariff bill is a poor- provision for the. islanders. They can raise nothing that is raised in our northern states—no wheat, rye, oats or corn— and they can raise products that the United has vast market for. From the Puerto Rican standpoint they want free trade, and they cannot understand why. they should be. discriminated against in their trade' with the rest of the United States." REM ALL OF,THIS. Vou Never Know the Moment When this Information May Proveof Infinite Value. It is worth considerable to any reader of this paper to knqw the value and use of a medicine, for if there is no occasion to employ it in the mean time, frail Jiumanity is subjected to so many influences and unforseen con tingencies that the wisest are totally unable to gauge the future. Know then, that Doan's Ointment will cure any case of hemorrhoids, commonly knoyra as piles, or any disease of the cuticle .or skin, generally terme,d ec zema. One application convinces—a continuation cures. Read this proof. Mrs. T. P. Ross* guest of the Fargo. Hpuse on North Front street, Fargo, N. D., says: "My husband suffered intensely from itching hemorrhoids. He tried physicians' treatment, oint ments innumerable, everything he could think about and everything ad vised by friends and acquaintances" to rid himself of the intolerable annoy ance but until he tried Doan's Oint ment all his efforts were futile. He used the ointment faithfully for three weeks and the itching was completely allayed. The hemorrhoids shrunki gradually away until they disap peared. The pleasure of such a result can only be understood by those who suffer similarly. To share in this pleasure there is^' only one course* to pursue if at all troubled with hemorr hoids, that course is, buy Doan's Oint ment and the results will follow." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents.- Mailed by Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y., sole agents for the United States. Remember the name Doan's and take no other. FIRE AT MINNEAPOLIS. TXt is reported in the city today that a disastrous fire occurred at Minne apolis this morning The Guaranty Loan building, one of the finest blocks in the city, and a block in the vicinity is reported destroyed Several lives are said to have been lost. INFORMATION WANTED. Postmaster Loomis of Fargo has re ceived a letter from Fred L. "Mills of Hubbard, Ore., wno asks for informa tion concerning a North Dakota soldier who Is -credited With' hav ing taken down a list of American prisoners which he found written on the walls -of a prison, Mr. Mills is making an effort to locate a brother from the Qfregon regiment who has been mi$sing for some time. If the Baby is Cutting: Teeth Be sure to use that old and well tried remedy, Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething. It soothes the child, softens the gums, nllays all pain curqs wind eolie,and is the ^t remody for diarrhoea 25 cents a'bottle. JOHN DREW," •i." most popular S cent oigar. Mrs. Dewey has confided to a few in timate friends that while she and the admiral are traveling this spring they '--'f inkham's VogeiablJ^. Compound our os tho ills pooui/ar to womon. It tones up tho/r gonoral healthw oases tio wn irer wrought nerves, euros those ulaies menstruation, ft does this because It aots directly on the fo~ It healthy, relieving and ouring all Inflanunatlon and displacements. Nothing else is Just as good and many things that may be suggested are dangerousThis great medioine has a constant rooord of ourom Thou sands of women testify to itm Read their letters con stantly appearingln this paporm will ascertain the feeling of the public toward Admiral Dewey and the presi dency and decide whether he will be a candidate. PEOPLE'S STANDARD HISTORY. The People's, Standard History of the United States has been over three years in preparation, under the direct literary supervision of Prof. Ellis, the well known writer and historian, upon whom Princeton university conferred the degree of Master of Arts in recog nition of the high educational value'of his several historical works. He ranks as one of the foremost authorities on historical subjects and has devoted to this, his master production, the most exhaustive research, and has brought to it the accumulated knowledge gleaned fronr every reliable source^ He has left no field untouched and touched nothing which he has riot vitalized and adorned. SOME LOCAL OPINIONS. "Thevalue of good literature in the home cannot be over estimated. The of the People's Standard Histo United States is certainly ah attractive and valuable work which will stimu late research and study in the home and I take pleasure in recommending It to all parents who value the future of their children, especially those pre paring for teaching."—L. Lyon, County Superintendent of Stutsman County. "The People's Standard History of the United States is a work which ought to be in the home of every good American family. The illustrations and mechanical effects, are "far supe rior to most works placed before the public at such reasonable prices. I -take pleasure in recommending the work to all."—Rev. Father P. McPhee of Jamestown. -I take pleasure in stating that Ellis' History -of the United States is a very popular and interesting work. The author takes undisputed facts, the si lent features,1 and presents them in a most fascinating manner. I consider it one of the most valuable works ever offered to the public. I have pur chased one of the sets and consider it a valuable addition to my'library, and any person purchasing same, in my judgment, will make no mistake. C. D. EDICK. ^'3^ WANTED, rentici iiliSi Apprentice girls to learn millinery, LUCAS & O'HARA, HORSES FOR SALE. Fifteen head of horses, mares and geldings, 3 to 8 years old, except One mare is 12 years old, one mare colt 1 year 0I4, sired by Lord Nelson—record 2:17. Horses weigh from 1,050 to 1,300 pounds. Horses are all gentle, three teams being work horses and well broken. Prefer to sell entire •bunch to one party. Terms cash o& bankable paper.. Address, 'v r^C. L. TIMMERMAN, Mandan, N. D. "•'y*. Four Tbousand More. ZAokea Oat. "OmoAao, March 14.—-Another serious complication' in the great building strike came during the day when the sash, door and blind manufacturers of Chi cagp and vicinity voted to close their .mills until the labor troubles are ad justed. By this action 4,000 men are added to the 50,000 now idle. Indiana to Get Boyalt£. Wajshxnqtok, March 14.—The secre tary of the interior has decided that op erators of mines in the Choctaw and Ohickasaw Nations shall pay for the benefit of the Indians a royalty of 8 cents a ton on each ton of coal. Senators to Visit Cubs. Washington, March 14. Senators Piatt of Connecticut, Aldrich of Rhode Island and Teller of Colorado have been appointed a subcommittee in behalf of the committee on Cuban relations to visit Cuba. They will leave Washing ton Wednesday and expect to be absent ten days or two weeks. bk1* Pftrto Hxhlbltu Paris, JSiaroh 14—Cuba's exhibits fo/ the Paris exposition reached this city on board the United States transport Bu» lord, from Havana. The exhibits com prise 100 large cases whiolvwill be foi^ V.Ttfded to Havre by an early steamer. mem' mmMt, ^^f|gl^?^lpi BISMARC^IDAILY TRIBUNE WEDNESDAY. MARflH i90|' ROOSEVELT, Editor Winship Invited Gov. Roose velt to beJPresent at G. Reunion. A Grand Forks iteni' says: Hon George B. vVinship has just returned from a trip to Aioany, N. Y., where he went as a representative of the G. A. R., Spanish, war veterans, Philippine veterans, and citizens of Grand Forks to bear to Gov. Roosevelt an invita tion to be present at the G. A. R. re union which is to be held here on July 4. While unsuccessful in this Mr. Winship was accorded a most coir dial reception by Governor Roosevelt, and brouguc from him warm greetings to the people of North Dakota. Mr. Winship needed ho other introduction, to the governor than the announcer merit that he was from North Dakota, a state upon which the great Rough Rider looks as, in a sense, his early home. Gov. Roosevelt spoke of the days, only a few years ago, when he himself was a North Dakotan, when the ranch was more familiar to him than the streets of New York, and when hp took part in the work and the play of the Western plains with a zest and earnestness equal to that of any cowboy. This Was at a period in young Roosevelt's life when the boy was developing into the man, and there is no doubt that the wild life of the plains had a material influence' in developing in the young: man the force, energy and directness which have since characterized him. Whether or not Mr. Roosevelt ever becomes president North Dakotans will .always regard him as in some degfee a pro duct of their soil and climate. Gov. Roosevelt was. greatly pleased to receive an invitation from his western friends to visit them, but was compelled to decline a§ he has engage ments for ail summer which make "it impossible for him to accept any more invitations. He expects to visit Min neapoiis on the occasion of the meet ing of the republican league, but be yond this he will make 'no western trip this year, unless sent out to do campaign work by the national com mittee. Postmaster Budge has also just re turned from Washington, where he went to confer with the department with reference to the appointment of another clerk for trie Grand Forks postoffice, the work here having be come entirely too heavy for the pres ent force. Upon his representations it was decided to appoint anbther clerk, and ^he selection will be made soon. Another object which Mr. Budge had in view was to secure the support of the North Dakota delegation in con gress for the bill appropriating money to be expended for the support of min ing schools in the various states and territories. This bill, which was in troduced by Representative Montell, provides for the appropriation before the end of the next fiscal year, of the sum of $15,000 for the support of schools of mines and metallurgy and for the increase of this sum by an ad-' dition of $1,000 each year until the total annual appropriation reaches $25,000. This money is to be taken from the receipts from sales of public lands. Mr. Budge was particularly inter ested in this bill because at the univer sity1 of North Dakota, of which he is a trustee, a mining school has been in successful operation for some time, and, though hampered by lack of funds, it has done splendid work in the de velopment of the mineral resources of the state. Through the work of this school information has been obtained which has led to the partial develop ment of the great iignitfe coal beds of the state, and enough has been done to show that the state has in these coal beds almost inexhaustible supplies of fuel'which will adi. millions of dollars to the wealth of the state. From the same source came the information which ied to the establishment of the Pembina cement works and the Dick inson pressed brick works, and the work of the school has scarcely yet be gun. The appropriation proposed in the bill will give needed aid to just such institutions as that of North Da 'kota. A curious incident connected with the bill is the fact that though it so intimately concerns the interests of North Dakota, not a membftr o£ the delegation from this state was ap proached on the subject or knew any thing about it uiitil it had been re ferred. DOES THIS. STRIKE YOU? •"Muddy .complexions, nauseating breaths, come from chronic constipa tion, Karl's Clover Root Tea is an absolute cure and has been .sold for fifty years on an absolute guarantee. Price 25 cents and 50. cents. E. S. Beardsley, druggist, Fourth street The navy may leave Tortugas, in ac cordance with refcominendation by Surgeon General Wyman, who fears or ordinaty 1 allowing the TAILOR Ely's Cream Balm "Easy and pleasant to n&e. Contmns CANCER a bad form of cancer, $WL iw 1|rlP*ere 's one One dozen cheviot, tailor made suits, in eluding* black its no. In- jarlotiB drag. It Isqnlckly ^absorbed. Gives Belief at once. It Opens and Cieanaea^ COLD HEAD Heals and Protects the Hembraae. Hestores the Senses of Taste and Smell. Large Size, 60 cents at Druggists or by mall Trial Size, 10 cents by nail. ElCx BKOTHEIiS, 66 Warren Street, New York. The German emperor sent his con gratulations to the pope on tb^e latter's ninetieth birthday. 1 best things ever goffered in our cloak department 1 Very handsome venetine broad cloth suits •, sfsssf jr outbreaks of yellow- fever and bubonic plague. suite in blue and bliack, strictly tailorV Hlj "made•^f •••-.• '44. vi iris New'Spring Jackets. EnaUthe new colpiings. 3STew capes in many- di Jlf&rent styles. -W In connection with our stock of dry goods we COMPLETE LINE OF MILLINERY, Our Motto: Quick salis and Small Profits^^ CATARRH THE cr-KANsrsro AND HEAUNQ CUKE FOB CATARRH ,/ AN HONEST MEDICINE FOR LA GRIPPE. 'George W. WaittT of South Gardner, Me., says: "I have had the worst cough, cold, chills and grip and have taken lots of trash of no account but profit to the venuor. Cnamberlain's though Remedy is the only thing that has done any good whatever. I have used one bottle of it and the chills, cold and grippe have all left me. I con gratulate the manufacturers of an hon est medicine." For sale by E. S. Beardsley. More than 2,000 Parisians earn their living as fortune-tellers. ON EVERY BOTTLE. Of Shiloh's Consumption Cure is this guarantee: "All we ask of you is to use two-thirds of the contents of this bottle faithfully,, then if you can say yon are not benefited return the bot tle to your druggist and he may re fund the price paid." Price 25 cents 50 cents and $1.00. E. S. Beardsley, druggist Fourth street vp'f*. mm* Six vice presidents of the United States have died while in office. George Clinton died April 20, 1812 Elbridge Gerry, Nov. 23, 1814 William Rufus King, April 18, 1853 Henry Wilson, Nov. 22, 1875 Thomas A. Hendricks, Surgical operations and flesh destroying plasters are useless, painful and dangerous, and besides, ttever care Cancer. No matter how often s£ cancerous sore is removed, another comes at or near the same point, and always in a worse form, a not this prove concluavely that Cancer is a blood disease, and thatit is folly to attempt to cure this deep-seated, dangerous sd trouble by cutting or' burning out the sore, which, after all, is only an outward sign of the disease—a place of exit for poison 1 Cancer run# in families through many generations, and those whose ancestors have been afflicted, with it are at aire to be atric^ra with «ie deadly maladjjp Only Blood Diseases can be Transmitted from One Generatiln to Another —further proof that Cancer is a disease of the blood. To care a blood disease likethisyou must cute the entire blood, system—remove every trace Of the poison. Nothing coxes Cancer effectually and permanently but S. S. S. S. S. S. enters the orculation searches out and removes all taint, and stops the formation of cancerous cells. No mere tonic or ordinary blood medicine can do this. S. S. S. goes down to the very roots of the disease, and forces out the deadly poison. leal naturally and permanently. S. S. S. at the same time purifiesthe blood and builds up the general Mm. Sarab M. !Kc»liag, 941 Windaor Ave^ Bristol, Tcnnn writes: "I am 41 years old, and for three years bad suffered with a severe form of Cancer, on my j»w, wbtch the doctors in this dty eaidwks inconble. and th»t could not live more than six months I accepted ttatetncnt aa true, and had given up ail Hope Qf ever being well tgtSx, when mv drua knowing °rmyconMdoo, recomraaided S. 6. S. Alter taking a few bottles the sore began to heal, much to the iturprlse of the physkfitaa, and in a short time made a complete cure.1 1 la «{^endid, sleep Is refreshing—in $rct, aat Our medical department is experience, who are especially A little pimple, a harmless looking wart or mole, a lump in the breast, a cut or brmse r«rfuses heal under ordinary treatnfent, should all ^be looked upon with, suspicion, as this is often the buinnitu of laog .'"f SUPPER. "J"? The Bac&elors and Benedicts will serve supper over George Gussner's fjr store instead of Atheneum St Patrick's /-f evening from 5:30 to 9 o'clock p. mf Menu. Celery Tongue Pickles •M ki", ffr'-" S7.50 .!•/]'.—— A A W cil'. Nov. 25, 1885, and Garret A. Nov. 21, m. Hobart, Iffts. Calvin Zimmerman, Milssburg, Paif says,- "As a speedy cure for coughs, colds croup and sore throat One Minute Cough Cure is uneflualed. It is pleasant for children to take. I heartily recommend it to mothers." It is the only harmless remedy that produces immediate results. It cures bronchitis, pneumonia, grippe and throat and lung diseases. It will pre vent consumption. E. S. iJeardsley, 1 Stew Bolls '.1 1 Jf Oysters rO RawCt^^fe Catsup Hams#" Roast Pork Cranberry- Sauc» Olives Jelly Cabbage Salad Coffee Doughnuts Potato Salad Cake Ice Cream Sherbet Tea cents. TELL YOUR SISTER A beautiful complexion is an imjos sibility without good pure blood, the sort that only exists in connection with good digestion, a healthy liver and bowels. Karl's Clover Root Tea acta directly on the Tjowels, liver and kid neys keeping them in perfect health. Price 25 cents and 50 cents. E. S. Beardsley, druggist, Fourth street. STAMP PHOTOS. Parties desiring stamp photographs call at the tent on Fourth street, near electric light plant »Th^s will be for a short time only The wild pigeon can fly 12l miles an hour,, the teal 100 miles, the mallard 85, the wild goose 70 to 75 miles. '•&5S £|i To Cure a Cold in One Day. Take laxative Bromo Quinine Tab lets. All druggists refund the money if it fails to cure. E. W. Glove's sig nature is on each box 25 cents. Cannot b& Cut Out or Romoved with Plasters 4 i" to of v. ,r'