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V* V% ft 3S lis it I IL-*- Ik- |lr®fct §isras*f& Stibunr. By M. H. JEWELL. THE DAILY TRIBUNE. Published every afternoon, except Sun day, at Bismarck. North Dakota, Is deliv ered by carrier to all parts of the city at 50 cents per month, or $0 per year. The dally sent to any address In the United States and Canada, postage prepaid, $tt per year $3 for six months $1.50 for three months. THE WEEKLY TRIBUNE. Published every Friday: eight pages, containing a summary of the news of the week—local and foreign—particular atten tion being paid to state news. Sent to any address, postage paid, for $1.00 for one year 50 cents for six months 25 cents for three months. The Bismarck Tribune is the oldest newspaper in the state—established June n, 1873. It has a wide circulation and Is a desirable advertising medium. Being published at the capital of the state it makes a feature of state news, of a semi official character, and Is therefore particu larly Interesting to all who desire to keep the run of state affairs—political, social and business. The republicans seem to have won out generally in the Colorado munici pal elections—except Cripple Creek— Asa Fisher being down in old Mexico— went democratic. The Fargo Forum—usually careful of the feelings of fellow editors—is un wind enough to intimate that the Forum—as now run—is as good as Editor Wood of the Steele Ozone would run it—if he had a chance. The Minnesota senate has passed the house primary election bill but it exempts state officers from its provis ions. The advice erf the Grand Forks Herald should have been extended in the direction off the twin cities—there was enough for two states. A brief note announces the arrival of 'Mayor Johnson at New York, on his return from Europe to Fargo. He must have passed Editor Tuttle on the ocean, so that the Atlantic has stood the test of the weight of these two distinguished men at the same time. The new city administration will take hold ot affairs on Tuesday the 16th inst. While the city council is a tie so Car as the party tickets were concerned it is composed of good citi zens and there is every reason to be lieve the city will be given an excel lent administration. Mr. Register is an old citizen, understands the condi tion of the city's finances—is a lawyer, a -property owner and in his effort to fill the position of chief executive of the city he should and will receive the hearty co-operation of all good citizens regardless of party or faction. It will be well to drop politics now and get down to business. The Devils Lake Inter-Ocean ob serves: A St. Paul man who recently returned from the Pacific coast tells the papers of that city that Seattle, Tacoma and Portland are crowded with moneyless men, and that there is no work for many who seek it. Many of these unfortunates are stranded gold seekers who have managed to make their way back from Alaska, but have no means by which to secure transportation to their farmer homes. There is a significant lesson in all cfcis. The moral is that the get rich quick policy seldom pays. The slow but sure motto is the only safe one upon which to act. The idea of dig ging gold may seem attractive, but the truth is that it doesn't pay. Better by far is it to be a farmer in North EiliOta where industry never fails to lunig its reward, than it is to go pros pt jting for gold in cold and barren Alaska, or any other country for that ir_ .tier. Wheat and flax lands beat geld mines ten to one on the average. Sore Lungs I iKl t- mean weakened lungs all caused by a cold and cough. Weak lungs sooner or later mean consumption. Shiloh's Consumption |~r 'Cure i|v"^ will heal and strengthen the fc' lungs, cure cold and stop the §C cough "I coughed for years—twd bemorrbagea. Doctoniwud I wasin hut Mag* of connunp tion. Htd ghriiii up all hope. I finally tried and it cared ma mmpktcly. ia "t iWWwi DREW flMMon—pUnn Own, to mU by all dmiUi atWftlfc. 0LM bottle. A printed gMWatii Wttfe ov«y bottto. If yonaara art wtfrfrt go to ywr dnfgUt Write for tiltmnted fcoofc oo cgnaamotion. Seat itithwaewi sejew 8. Walk ft Co., L*Roy,M.V, A E I S E SUCCESSFULLY FOR MAIL ORDER BUSINESS Send for'my Advertiser's Pocfcet Guide of Money Making bista of loading: Dailies, Weeklies and Monthlies. The key to the best known mwJiuma. Valuable and inter esting to beginners sent -free. Renowns GroiexTKEK, Sewspaper awl Magnsiae Ad v-ertisin*, 10B Fulton St., New tork. Foetal cajcda not answered. mm A PRAIRIE BREEZES AN APRIL DAY. Underneath an April sky, Bathed in sunshine warm, I lie, Leaves o' green an' skies o' blue— Hello! There's a raindrop, too! Underneath an April sky Soaking, pelting pellets fly, Shelter kind I seek to gain— Hello! There's the sun again. Underneath an April sky, "Beauteous Springtime!" Thus I cry. "Glorious, gracious Spring!" Hello! 'Pon my word! A flake of snow! April, thou'rt a fickle jade, Heart where many moods are played, Smiles o' sun an' tears o' rain Melting into smiles again. Fickle April! Shine an' shower, Tear an' smile, or frost an' flower, Gloom an' sunshine, grave an' gay, Life, 'tis but an April day! A STORMY MONTH. REV. IRA W. HICKS SAYS APRIL WILL BE SUCH. According to Rev. I. R. Hicks it will be wise to keep your weather eye open throughout the present month. -While he doesn't announce any cataclysm in his predictions for April, he says there may be some very severe storms that it will be well to watch closely with the door to the cyclone cellar wide open and all ordinary obstructions out of the way. The first of the series is booked for this week. Storms of a dangerous character are not certain but probable. For today high tem peratures are predicted and low bar ometric readings with possible hail and thunder storms of unusrual sever ity. Tornadoes for various localities ate to be expected during the week. Mr. Hicks predicts warmer weather for the middle of the month. Be tween Sunday and- Tuesday, the 14th and 16th, he says may occur sharp storms of rain, hail, wind and thun der. During the succeeding week very threatening storms may be looked for in the southern states. Another storm period is predicted for the days between the 24th and 28th. The in fluence of the storms of this period are expected to reach up into the northern states. A warm wave will precede the stortms. The dates are not fixed exactly by Mr. Hicks, but only indicated in a general way. The predictions are interestingly put and furnish matter for study. 1 A VALUABLE I1EDICINE. FOR "COUGHS AND COLDS IN CHIL DREN. "I have not the slightest hesitancy in recommending Chamberlain's Cough remedy to all who are suffering from coughs or colds," says Chas. M. Cramer, Esq., a well known watch maker, tf Colombo, Ceylon. "It has been some two years since the city dispensary first called my attention to this valuable medicine and I have re peatedly used it and it has always been beneficial. It has cured me quickly of all chest cold&. It is especially effective for children and seldom takes more than ong bottle to cure them of hoarseness. I have per suaded many to try this valuable medicine, and they are all as well pleased as myself over *the results." For sale by E. S. Beardsley, druggist. NOTICE, All persons having claims against the city of Bismarck are requested to present them at once to the city aud itor for action by the city council. H. W. RICHHOLT, City Auditor. "3L and I*. T." What is it? The Tobacco Taste "Even the best judges of tobacco can't always be depended' on," remark ed a dealer to & .reporter recently. "Sometimes their taste goes back on them, so to speak, and remains blunt ed for a week at a stretch. One of my customers, for instance, is a well to do merchant, who Is very particular about hlscigars and one' of the few real con noisseurs in town. When he is In good form, be can tell more about to bacco a superficial examination than anybody I know, with the single exception of & dealer who has a big reputation as an expert About month ago this gentleman began to complain about a favorite brand of very high dase cigars- I knew the goods wefe all right and advised him to buy something else for awhile. He dnaJUy began smoking a pipe and used a cheap cut plug that he declared was the beet smoke be ever tried. One day, all of a sodden, his taste return ed, and be vat back to the cigars. At present the bare sjnell of cut plug will make him sick. Strange, isn't it? They tep me fliat the professional sam plers of tobacco take a week off every tew, months and neve* look at weed untfl they return to that war thar fc oStar. :W If ». 5 *£_, the duty. Xa ^rr y- GRANDMAS OF TODAY THEY KEEP IN THE RACE WITH THE YOUNG PEOPLE TO THE ENOl The Old Faahloned Grandmother, the One Who Placidly Snt In the Chim ney Corner Darning Stoclctnas, Ia a Thtnar ot the Past. I was bemoaning the fact that I had never known my grandmothers. One died before I was born and the other when I was a few months old. I thought it would be so comforting to have a grandmother because they al ways regarded their grandchildren as being incapable of doing wrong. At least they were sure to multiply one's virtues and minimize faults.. Their chief object in life, as I picture them, was to minister to their descendants* comfort, to make the crooked places straight. Tlje grandmother of my fan cy would keep my clothes in repair, darn the stockings, knit plenty of wash rags and silk mittens, surprise me with my favorite dishes, laugh at my jokes and generally submerge her life in the affairs of mine. What was I going to do in return for all this unselfish devo tion? I would be her granddaughter. That, according to the old traditions, was quite enough compensation. I was holding forth, exploiting my views and desires on the grandmother question in the presence of one of those people who delight to take a person down and make him feel cheap, espe cially if they imagine one is posing as younger than the family Bible records. This individual spoke up and said: "Why, if your grandmothers were liv ing they would be so aged that they would be mummified. Instead of darn ing your stockings, knitting your mit tens, they would be blind, deaf and im becile. You would have to tend them with greater slavishness than a mother a newborn babe, and without the sweet recompense in the latter case. When people 'become imbecile with age, they grow repulsive, and the pro longing of this state is dreadful, while each day the unfolding of a budding life is filled with mysterious delights." Of course I did not want a grand mother that was deaf, blind and imbe cile. I thought I would drop the sub ject, as it appeared to be getting per sonal. But my companion continued: "Besides, could it be possible in the or der of things for you to have a vigor ous, industrious, capable grandmother, she would not be sitting at the chimney corner darning your stockings. She would be oat attending to her lodge or club business, visiting the millinery openings, ordering a fashionable gown, playing cards or attending a high tea. The old fashioned grandmother is as much a thing of the past as the spin ning wheel, the canaiboat, stagecoach, making candles and tamily rendered soap. I protested that I did not believe my grandmothers would be of the modern pattern. I had heard my mother tell often of how completely her mother lost her taste .for society and outside affairs -after she had grandchildren. She had raised a large family, but these reproductions were just as much & delight as had been the originals.' She infinitely preferred their society to that of grown people. Their prattle, school experiences, little ambitions, filled her life completely. She was constantly planning surprises for them by making animal cakes, individual pies, candy, iaprons, hoods, doll clothes. 'Yes, but if she lived now she would be different The air she would breathe is filled with assertive germs which de clare that every woman owes it to her self to have a career and stand at the helm and steer it to the very end. She must not allow her life to be submerg ed in that of her own children, as they make their appearance rather unwel come frequently, but must have outside missionsi As soon as her offspring is married off,. which is accomplished with as great dispatch as diplomacy can secure, then she is free to carry out pei scnemes ana natural aesires un trarameled." •Perhfips you are right," 1 replied. Such a grandmother as this would be no comfort to me as a grandmother, while she might be a most helpful friend, and I could be proud of her po sition in the literary, artistic or philan thropic world ds her tastes might dic tate her pursuit. A' grandmother of my acquaintance said to me not long ago: "It would be a great trial to me to have my grand children or any children in the house1 with me now. 1 could not adapt my self to their demands and interrup tions. I have raised my family and now want my time for individual pur suits." This woman has especial tal ents and necessities tor using them, and in her case these feelings inay not seem unnatural But this is much the sentiment that possesses the grand mothers of die age wild have no special missions or avocations outside the db mestic circle. If they have means, they buy handsome gifts tor tfceir grandchildren and wisb them to Dave all the advantages possible that do not represent personal self sacrifice or cur tailment of freedom of action. Women are Imbued with the spirit of the age, which demasds that there gbsil be no old ladies with .caps and •hawlB who stay at hoine and guard the fireside, but that they must keep in the race with tbe young people to the very end—Susan W. Bali In Terre HanteGasette.r. n* Hayflr Wh» OMMat Spell »W During the several terms that Tim Cfinpbell served in congress he was al ways prominent before the house. One Of his colleagues from Manhattan was Colonel Jack Adams, who, lawyer, Iffcfle fee and Mr. Campbell were in congress together spent most of his working off practic^ jokes at t£e em of fee east eifle statesman. Xlm had been in and out of Tammany feso&ftX times, tbosfe dbaxubm do. mmm BISMARCK DAILY TBIBUNB THURSDAY, APRIL 4,1901. pending on wfiether his claims were recognized or repudiated. A very hot political canvass found Tim one of the stanchest adherents of the HalL Colonel Jack had had a fall ing out with the powers and was just as strong on the other side. Tim took this very much to heart, as his admira tion for his fellow congressman was very strong. He concluded that, where all others had failed to bring Colonel Jack back into the fold, he (Tim) could succeed. "Now, Jack," Tim said, insinuatingly, "what do yoju want to go and fight the mayor for? Sure, he's a fine young fel low, bright and enterprising and one of the best educated men in America." "Educated!" exclaimed Colonel Jack contemptuously. "Educated, did you say?" "Sure, he's one of the very* best edu cated young fellows in this city." "Educated!" reiterated Adams, put ting an extra dose of contempt into his voice. "What would you say, Tim, if I told you that he was so little educated that he spells 'if with only one 'f "Does he do that?" responded Tim in a heartbroken tone. "He does." "Well, then, I have nothing further to say. I don't blame you."—Saturday Evening Post. KILL THE DANDRUFF GERM. OR YOUR HAIR WILL PALL OUT TILL YOU BECOME BALD. Modern science has discovered that dandruff Is caused by a garm that digs up the scalp in scales, as it burrows down t» the roots of the hair, where it destroys the 'hair's vitality, causing falling hair, and, ultimately, baldness. After Prof. Unma, of Hamburg, Ger many, discovered the dandruff germ, all efforts to find a remedy failed until the greait laboratory discovery was made which resulted in Newbro's Her picide. It alone of all other 'hair pre parations kills the .dandruff germ. Without dandruff, -hair grows luxur ianttily. "Desltroy the cause, you re move the effect" A Boutins Epitaph. The following epitaph is to be found in Dalkeith churchyard over the grave of Margaret Scott: Stop, ptasenger, until my lite you retd. The living may get knotrifldge by th* detd. Five times five years I lived a maiden's life Ten tiaies ive years I Hred a wtdoW «haAa. Now, veaty o( thi» mortal life, treat. Between my cradle and my grave Uye been Eight mighty kings of Scotland and a. qtleen. Four times five yean the commonwealth I saw Ten times the subjects rose against the law. Twice did I see old prelacy polled down, And twice the cloak was humbled by the gown. An end of Stewart's race I saw nay, more My native country soldi or English ore, Such deaolatiaBS in my liie Save been 1 have an end of all perfection seen. This lady was born in 1613 and lived to the age of 125 and, therefore, must have lived through the following list of rulers: James I, Charles I, the com monwealth of Oliver Cromwell as pro tector, Charles II, James II, William III and Mary, Anne, George I and George II.—London Chronicle." SCOURS IN COLTS AND CALVES. For a young calf or colt from a day to a month old give one teaspooaful of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea remedy in half a gill of water as a drench after each operation of the boVels more than natural usually one dose is sufficient. For older animals it may be given in the feed. Thousands of valuable ani mals aire saved by it each year. This remedy is just what you should take yourself when troubled with diarrhoea. For sale by E. 5. Beardsley. Bow Blaine Remembered Henderson. It was before General Henderson had been elected to congress, and Blaine was speaker of the house. Henderson was in Washington, and naturally Blaine was one of the statesmen that he much desired to meet, and the on portunity came of a morning Just as the speaker was passing through the lobby on his way to the marble ros trum. The formal greetings were ex changed in a brief moment, and Gener al Henderson was left to see the swing ing doors close on the form of the Re publican leader. Six years later General Henderson again camp to Washington, this time to get Iowa divided into two judicial dis tricts. He put up at Wormley's. where Blaine also lived, it being-ln those days a fashionable and flourishing hostelry. A week or so after his arrival from Iowa, as General Henderson was en tertng the dining room, he met Etyalne after having passed and repassed him many times. The Maine man' grasped him cordially by the band, called him by name and Inquired about Iowa. "I bad beard of Senator Blaine's wonderful faculty for remembering names,'' says General Henderson. "When I had seated myself at tbe table* I beckoned to tbe head waiter. *Hasn't Mr. Paine asked, you my name? I said to him. ''Now think bard and be sore ot fom answer.' 'Yes, sab/ replied the ncalter.} 'He done ca&ed me ovah las' night an asked yo* name an all about yo\ I told him yo' was Mistah Henderson."* Those famous little pills, DeWitt's Little Early Risers,' will remove all impurities from your system, cleanse your bowels, make them regular, E 8. Bwrdsley, druggist Should yon wtsh a new pair of shoes yon caa see tbe finest assortment in the northwect at'the Boston. ...-.•• —a' M&SM A choice' collection of jgptted plants for faster on sale atthe l^apital I N E S O N A I N S S A S A A A E Yards at.... SXSMABCK, WILTON. WASHBUBN. I 1 !, Snccessora to SKSStSS .INSURES ANYTHING INSURABLE.. We are Agents for the TJ. S. Fidelity & Guaranty Co. and caii bond you in any position of trust. PIONEER AGENCY, To ST. PAUL MINNEAPOLIS Office First National Bank, Bismarck, N. BETWEENf^GREAT NORTHWESTNTHE EAST. T. H. A Jobbers in I Building and Wrapping Paper Paper Sacks, Wooden Butter Plates, Etc. v/vr Bismarck and Washburn Lumber Co. DULUTH 1 AMD POINTS EAST&SOUTH BUTTiP* «POKHAENLfNA vacMr*" ?ORTiLANI CALIFORNIA CHINA ft'i''.*! f,\ ALASKA KLONDIKE Steott, A«»nt I Chas, 8. Fse, Q. P. A. |8lsnxarok, N. D. •. FAGlU.Kura DAKOTA BLOCK Biimaroks *. Q, T", Official /Recognued by the State for the cure of Inebriety of all kinds, Cancer, Goitre and Her* SKf.»cJ?re?«WITHOUT THE KNIFE. All rectal diseases &nd diseases of women treated by latest medical andsurgical i»i Bstabiislwd in 1895 o*. ww. ji. Bifincv Subscribe 'Book ST.JOh Bono FFALO E. ASST. EN'L P£ S, ,ag% N N SHOULD ADVERTISE IN THE DAILY AND WEEKLY TRIBUNE General Office and Yard: BISMAECK, N. D. Fifield Lumber Co., and Jj. P. Hoagiand. WANTED—100 cords of green|wood. The Electric Lighted Limited •'A twist of the wrist"—it's on. Another twist of the wrist, it's off—the berth light on the Burlington's Chicago Limited. Con veniences—a buffet-library smoker compartment and standard sleepers a dining car a reclining chair car electric light steam heat. Leaves Minneapolis 7:20 p. m., St. Paul 8i05 a. m. daily. Arrives Chicago 9:25 next morning and St. Louis 531 next after boon- The "Scenic Express" leayes Minneapolis 7:20 a. m„ St. Paul 8:15 a.'m., except Sunday, arriving Chicago 10:20 same even ing, and St. Louis 6:40 next morning- Ask yopr home agent for tickets via this line. S. ETJSTIS, GEO. Gen'l Pass, Agent, CHICAGO, ILL. Ass't Gen'l PasB. Agent. ST. PAUL, SUNk. VESTIBUIiED TRAINS. BOWING CABS. TIME CARD-BISMARCK. West .Bound. No. 11,.. East Bowidr No. 12... nmw HMTciiss in •v Wholes«le and Betail f'/i, O A wood: tog OATS bran, 8B0RTB 5? 10:15 p. m. 12-85IUBI. Way Freigtit. NO.B5, west bound, 4s85p No. 56, east bonnd^™®^™ Get Permit at Ticket Office far wiiMsr iwin SLATTERY, GUNS & d. AO. V* Corner Third and Broadway. iavMtM* Urn wUtSSrEre. fhL-