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Ihc Bismarck ftribunt By M. 11. JEWELL. THE DAILY TRIBUNE. FuliUsliwl every afternoon, except Sun day, nt Bismarck, North Dakota, Is deliv ered ly carrier to all parts of tile city at SO cents per mouth, or ft per year. The dally Kent to any addres* In the United State:) and Canada, postage prepaid, $«J per year $11 (or six months (or three mouths. THE WEEKLY TRIBUNE. Published every Friday eight pages, coutalulug a summary o( the news of the week- -local and foreign—particular atten tion being paid to state uews. Sent to any address, postage paid, for $1.00 (or one year 50 cents for six months 23 cents (or three months. The Bismarck Tribune Is the oldest newspaper In the state—established June 11, 1S73. It has a wide circulation and 1 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. PROBABLE CROP PROSPECT8. The Kargo Call thus sizes up the crop situation: The Call reporter has been making the rounds among the traveling men and visitors in the city from over the state and the consensus of opinion ap pears to be that North Dakota will reap about one half its usual yield of wheat and flax, and about a third of sn oat crop. Corn is universally good in tho northwest which will help out the hay crop which is reported very light on the whole, though in pome locali ties the tame and native grasses are reported to be of heavy growth. Cass county crops are much better than last year, but even at that will be very light, for the Red River Valley lands. Grand Forks, Nelson and Walsh are in bad shape taken as a whole. One of the prominent travelling men who sees almost all the machinery dealers of the state, reports that North Dakota will reap about ten bushels per acre sown, oats about eighteen or twenty and flax from seven to ten. Flax and corn are leaders this year while wheat and oats and hay are considered light crops. Another man interviewed says that North Dakota will not reap to exceed seven to ten bushels of wheat, ten to twelve of oats and six to eight of flax. One of the jobbers of the city stated yesterday that he thought the crops of the present year and the existing conditions will in the end be a blessing to the industry of the state, for the reason (hat the eyes of the more in telligent farmers will be opened to the fact that mixed farming is the only hope for making a success. He thinks however, that the average farmer will be in good shape even with the short crop" as he has been very ^onserva-1 tive during the past year in the pur-' chase of machinery, etc. It is expected that the machinery dealers and job-j bers will push collections to the limit this fall, but it is expected that the companies wili find at the end of their, collection season, that they are carry ing less paper in the state than they have for many years before The farmer will undoubtedly reap less1 grain, but with short straw we always have a fair grade and a good price. which with the conservative policy of the past year, will leave the farmer in a little better condition at the end of the season than they usually are with a bumper crop. wisdom and justice, and the materia! 'ff "nd ,u r* .v i- .. .. interests of the Catholic church have between Senator Hansbrough and Col Creel of Devils Lake, an undertaking .. At_ that at one time threatened to rivalI there. Assisted by Johnnie Owynne Vaughan, the saloon keeper. A. B. Zing. A. \I. Pease, who robbed Barnes county of $35,000, and others, the hotel ofl!ce was a lively place that winter. Wilcox. Donaldson, Gwynne-Vaughan ar.d Zing: are dead. Smith goes to the penitentiary. Pease is in British Columbia, but the Enterprise manages to get oir. an issue once a week under the same old management. A Sly Editor. Washburn Miner: Say. but McLean county has the best looking lot of, schoo! maams in the state judging from the looks of the large number that returned from the Bismarck insti-j tute Saturday. Or we are no judge on beauty. ADVERTISING A NECESSITY. Farmers in the Vicinity of Litctiville Look with Suspicion on Farmers Who Do Not Advertise. Litohvllle Bulletin: W. E. Davis, editor of the Commercial Bulletin, Minneapolis, writes to the Bulletin asking the old man to write a"little piece" showing the need of merchants to advertise In the local newspapers. If William will east his eagle eyes over a copy of this newspaper he will rind In its advertising columns the mimes and business of every institution in f^itchvUle. In this famous Lltchville coun try where the farmers are as enterprising as the merchants, no business man anxious to keep out of the clutches of the sheriff ever attempts to engage in mercantile pur suits without advertising In the local news paper. It Is considered In bad taste by farmers hereabout to Intrude upon any merchant who does not Invite one's patron age by advertising. To not advertise at all Is considered an affront and Insult to the town and country and to discontinue adver tising is considered a sign of Impending bankruptcy. Buyers of goods are well in formed that every progressive merchant advertises and those who do not are men whose methods are worthy only of close watching. So it is in Lltchville. all busi ness men advertise because they wish to. because It pays them to do so and because none of tliem care to be known In so enterprising a community as nonprogress ive. In all North Dakota we know of but one town where every business house advertises—and that's IJtchvllle. Does the Minneapolis paper know of any other town ill the state so progressive? New Medlcai Men. At meeting of the state board of medi cal examiners held at Fargo Dr. James P. Aylen. of Sheldon, was re-elected presi dent, ami Dr. H. M. Wheeler, of Grand Forks, was re-elected secretary and treas urer. Out of the 2S young physicians who took tile recent examination conducted by the board 24 were successful. The new physicians: Dr. Courtney. Brainerd. Minn. Josephine S. Llndstrom. Oberon. J. M. Ekrem, Ft. Ransom. C. A. Warner, Drayton. Ferdinand G. Benn. Kului. C. E. McRcynolds. Mooreton. W. P. Thelen. Carpio. Willard L. Burnoin Coopcrstown. Charles V. B. Pooler. Chicago. T. W. Welch, Chicago. A. W. Skelsey. Fargo. A. M. Lindhurg. ItowbelU. J. J. Rutcliffe. Valley City. Geo. P. Wilkinson. Omaha. J. A. Johnson. Blackrivcr Falls. Wis. Curl Rolicfson. Kenmare. L. H. Busscn, Valley City J- K- t'ramond, Rugby ). W. Howe, Towner. Arthur A. Whlttemore. Leeds. 11. Silver. Oakes. Alfred M. Call. Rugby, C. K. Splcer, Dazey. The best and the cheapest at Michel* sons. A CROWDED CITY. To Walk la Coaataatinople I. Like a Fierce Strangle. To walk in Constantinople is like a fierce and active struggle. One should look at once before, behind and under neath one's feet. Some danger or dis gust is always threatening. I never walked up the steep road which leads from the bridge to Peru without the Pope Leo XIII. made a gallant light against death, but has paid the inevit able debt that man owes to nature. He was 93 vears of age and had been the first figure in the Catholic church for 25 years, his pontificate having ex-j feeling that was fighting my way ceeded that of all his predecessors, through a hostile city. A horn blows Leo was a man of ability and genius. I furiously, and a black man runs up the Hi? pontificate was characterized byi^"' c'* aring the way before the dash- strugglln* hor8,?8 At tl,e A 1 any one of the famous tasks of Her-1 wheels and horses are upon you. You cules. step back Into the midst of the dogs and the hamnls. As you stand aside for a moment a beggar with a liandless arm rounded into a stump and a woman with her face eaten away in the cavity of the hood which she draws back be fore you appear suddenly, filling what had seemed the only ulley of escape. Editor Keeps Out of the Pen. Tho sentence of Frank B. Smith, the Kensal barber, to the penitentiary ca«J3eil Fditor McKean of the Sanborn Enterprise to recall old times. He says: "Smith began business in San born in 1881, running a shop in the office of the old hotel, then managed by J. L. Wilcox, The same winter the Enterprise had a frame in the hotel office, the type for the paper being set there and the forms taken to James town where the press work was done. Dr. E. S. Donaldson also had his offir* °,f tram. "amc moment a cab drives nt fu„ speod down tfae and the horHM boon substantially advanced through net their feet on the pavement. In front his diplomacy and sound sense. It will! of you a man balances slices of offal on be well for the church if a man equally a long |o!e across his shoulder. They broad and sensible is elected as his dangle before and behind. He swings accessor. cheerfully with his burden through the crowd. A Kurd, stooping under a -nu weight higher than himself, follows, he Grand Forks Herald is author- step by step, behind you. Your feet slip ity for the statement that Alexander la slushy mud and catch on the cobbles McKenzie has again acted as peace-' or in the gaps of the road. maker this time restoring harmony! dog with a red wound behind his e®' alM^ a "1" strip of mangy skin on hU back »e«a8,eeP in °'^e pavement. You step into the road to avoia the dog8 und the hama,8 and The sun soaks down into the narrow street. The smell of the mud rises up into your nostrils, mingled with those unknown smells which in Constantino ple seem to ooze upward out of the ground and steam outward from every door and window and pour out of every alley und rise like a cloud out of the breath and sweat and foulness of the »nle. Arthur Symons in Harper's uzine. E I E W A E •••••••••••••I A Theodore Roosevelt Charles Dudley Warner John Motley William E. Gladstooe Andrew Lang CABOD Farrar William Culten Bryant Lyman Abbott Robert C. IngenoU John Charl BI8MABCK DAILY TRIBUNE: MONDAY, JULY 80. 1003 The August Century will contain the opening chapters of the 4 i. Andrew D. White's "Chapters from My Diplomatic Life," dealing with he minister's to Germany. 1879-1881. The ambassador fo'ind in those two years that his duties and pleasures gave him experiences sounded almost '-very note from the sublime to the ridicul ous. a t'l brought him into close ucu not only with such personages as Pres ident Hayes. Secretary Kvarts. Bca cotisfield. Browning, and the Emper ors William 11. but with all kinds of Americans in all kinds of predica ment's. Alice Katharine Fallows has pre pared for the August Century sum mary of Mew York City's fight for pure milk. The conditions found by in spectors and reformers when the war against death,' and disease-breeding milk wrs begun three years ago ire sickening and almost incredible. Now no housewife in New York has any excuse for buying contaminated milk. Certified milk is as pure as science and skill can make it- but its price puts it beyond the reach of many families, fifteen cents a quart being asked—and cheerfully paid by those who can afford it—for one farm's out put. Put "Inspected" milk may be had for the price of ordinary bottled milk The label. "Inspected by the Milk Commission of the Medical So ciety of the County of New York," guarantees that at the farms supply ing the milk, yards and barns are in sanitary conditions, cows properly car ed for. bottles and cans clean- that the milk is cooled at ..i trans ported quickly, and that it has not more than a certain number of bacter ia. and the farm is visited by an in spector and that the Milk Commission regards the milk as pure and health ful. Miss Fallow's article will be illus trated by Mis-s Charlotte H. Harding. This is But One of Many. Surprise has been expressed that in "Modern Eloquence" the subject of expansion is treated from ten distinct view-points by the ablest of our Amer ican statesmen and others. But those acquainted with "Modern Eloquence" expect to find every import:-nt Ques tion which agitates the public iho 'Highly inrasiied out by mc:i who. whatever their conclusion, i'e mast ers of «he.r facts. W i*\ fni o»m. up el public questio-.? in "Modern EW: :ence" in itself, a liberal eiiu cation. In "Modern Eloquence" the late President McKWey. in his After dinner Speech, "The Future of the Phillipines," delivered in Boston, out lines the policy of the administration regarding this absorbing question, which is still unsettled, and will no doubt remain so for years to come President Roosevelt, in "True Ameri canism and Expansion," voices his individuality United States Senator Beverage, in his beautiful after dinner speech, "The Republic that Never Re| treats," therein reflects his views of the question, gleaned from his person al experience and observations in the Philippine Islands Wu Ting-fang dip lomatically reviews the question from the standpoint of the comity of na tions Edward VII., in "The Colonies," and Joseph Chamberlain in "Imperial Domain," maintain generally the Eng lish doctrine of colonization. This is the question of universal interest, and is today unsettled. Opposite views are held by members of the United States Supreme Court. Our colonial experi ence is new, and its problems are enl grossing and interesting, and are bound to become an important issue in our governmental affairs. These vol umes were referred to on the above subject in the United State* Senate during the discussion of "Civil Govern ment for the Philippine Islands." on April 25th and 26th. last. "Modern Eloquence" is published by John D. Morris & Company. Philadelphia. FIRE ALARM NOTICE Owing to the dangerous condition of the fire alarm bell tower, the same having arrived at such a state of decay as to necessitate its removal, until turther notice the fire alarm will be as follows From 7 a. m. to 6 p. m. the alarm will be turned in to the Bis marck steam laundry on 5th street and from 6 p. m. until 7 a. m. the alarms will be turned in at the Bis marck Electric Light plant south N. P. depot. The alarm for flres will be one long blast of the whistle, and then the ward number will be sounded followed by a general alarm. All citi zens will take due notice and govern themselves accordingly. JOHN HOMAN, Chief Engineer. H. L. READE, Chairman Council committee on Fire Department. Low Summer Tourist Rates. Via Chicago Great Western railway. Round trips to Colorado, Utah, Black Hills, New Mexico and Texas points. Tickets on sale daily June 1st to Sept. 30th. Good to return Oct. 31st. For further information apply to any Great Western Agent, or J. P. Elmer, G. P. A., Chicago, 111. For up-to-date Job printing go to the Tribune office. MODERN ELOQUENCE Ex-Speaker Thomas B. deed's Splendid Library of the Best After-Dinner Speeches, Classic mnd Popular Lectures, Famous Addresses, Reminiscence, Repartee, Anecdote, Illustration, end Story, in ten handsome volumes, illustrated by fine photogravures and color plates. PCW or THC MANY CONTRIBUTORS Sir Henry Irving John Tyndall Charles l-'rancis Adams Champ Clark Rustelt H.Conwell John M. Allen Chauncey M. Depew Wendell Phillips Henry W. Grady onatnan P. Dolliver lobert I. Burdette Horace Porter Art em us Ward Newell Dwight HilUs Grover Cleveland Ward Beecher H. Choate ge William Curtis John L. Spalding Edward fcggleston Lord Beaconsfietd tPilliam InA. Dana osh Billings M. Evarts John Hay "Modern Eloquence" as a Guide to Success EVERY young man wants to succeed. How Obviously the way to learn to study the methods of men who have succeeded. Guides to success are many. What do they say lie honest. Tel! the truth. ^Worlc hard. Save money. I)o $20 worth of work for wages of $5. Such advice is good, no doubt, as far as it goes,—but is not something more needed? Did these methods alone make IIILMS, and ITOK, and HEED, and CARNEGIE, and CURTIS, successful Young men are not fools. They see that there is a secret of success, and that it is more than honesty and hard work, else every honest hard worker would be successful. The secret lies in controlling the minds of men. How to mak^ others believe you, trust you, and do what you wish,—this is what you must learn. To be sure, few will learn it but those who also work hard and tell the truth. These come first,—but they are not all. As a guide to the highest success, MODERN ELOQUENCE" has no rival. It is a splendid series of object-lessons by masters in the art of influencing men's minds. And the success aimed at is far more than mere money success. Fame, power, honor, the gratitude and love of generations to come,—these are the rewards which have spurred to such efforts the men whose words are gathered in these ten rich volumes. In "MODERN ELOQUENCE" the men who have won success in every line speak for our instruction:— In Law, there are Evarts and Phelps, both the Choates, Coudert, and David Dudley Field. In Journalism, Dana, Halstead, Watterson, McClure, McKelway, and Whitelaw Reid. In Politics, Cleveland and Harrison, ISlaine and Conkling, Sumner and Seward we listen to the eloquence of Gladstone, then to that of his great rival, Disraeli. In Literature, we have the best thoughts of Dickens and Thack- /d tv 100] eray, in contrast with the more modern humor of Howells and Mark Twain or Carlyle, Froude, and Moriey speak to us from across the NK sea, for comparison with our own Emerson and Curtis. /ft/ NRTFMW Among the heroes of ar are Grant and Sherman, Sampson1 and Schley, Miles, Wheeler, and I-cw Wallace. Among great Educators are Eliot, Gilman, and lladley. /V/ T* Ma D. Mtrrl* Among great Scientists, Huxley and Tyndall, Her- /a/ —iCtmpuf bert Spencer and Agassiz. /. Among successful men of Business are Carnegie A and Depew, E. W. Bok and Cyrus W. Field. Presi dent Eliot's address on the Uses of Education for Business," and Gladstone's Modern Training for Life," are guides for the beginner to learn' by heart and Bok's lecture on "The Keys to Success" is of the greatest practical value to every young man ambitious to succeed. ov/ Name. John D. Morris and Company Publishers Philadelphia Joseph Chamberlain MarkiTwaii) John B- Gordon Oliver Wendell Holmes Wu Ting Fang Hamilton Wright Mabte oseph efTersoa Arthur j. Balfour John Kuskin Henry M. Stanley Seth Low .0 your advertisement of Hon. Thomas B. Kced's I.ilirary ol MOURKN HLOVI/aNCB" la Bismarck 1 ribun* I should he pleased to rerelve port* folio of sample pages, photogravures, and chromatic plates also full particu* irs regarding bindings .prices .terms, etc. Occupation. Sired City and State... LUM NYE Restaurant MEALS at All HOURS Day or Night. Larder supplied with all seasonable delicacies. I Ladies dining room annex. 15th Street, between Main and Broadway. SOO TIME OARD No, 97, mixed, west bound, arrive 6.-00 p. No. 96, mixed, oaat bound, depart 8:45 a. m. Freight and paHeogera for Braddock, Na polooo, Oakes, Hankinson and all points oc tho S«o line to MiuDda^slii. Bismarck, Washburn dt Great Falls Railway Co. Official Time Card No. IS. Taking affect at a- m. Monday, February 10th, 1902. Daily except Sunday. No. 1. lilt. Stations. No. ':*)a. m. O..Lv..Biamarck..t..Ar. IKIOp. at. 9:10 a. m. 10..LT. ..Arnold t..Lv.2:20p. a. 9:90a.m. 18.. LT. Baldwin... t..Lv.l:50p. m. M.LT.ChapinJJct LT in:S0 a. m. 21.Ar.. Wilton I. LT.I:15 p. M. 28 ..Chapin. 10 JO a. m. 27 LT.Wilton....t..Ar.. 12:45 p. m. a LT.BooaeTelt L»..a 11:15a.m. 45 Ar..Wa(hbarn..t.LT.. 12:15p. a Stop on atgnal. Telegraph ftatlon. P. C. KCKELS General Supt. ...First E.H. WALKER Traffic Manager National Bank BISMARCK, W. D. ESTABLISHED IN IS79 C. B. LITTLE, Pres. F. D. KKNDRICK, Vice Pres. Throngh Car Route SST.ftUL MINNEAPOLIS NL# YORK, RCW ENGLAND, BOSTON, MONTREAL, QUEBEC, ONTARIO, MICHIGAN, NEW^BRUNSWICK, NOVA SCOTIA. Tferosgh Sleepersi!%stoi LUMiailOR, Genml Ms AiiiAMMv From St.Paul and Minneapolis to Chicago Milwaukee and the Cast St Louis and the South 1 I S. M. PYK, Cashier. J. L. BELL, Asst. Cash. CAPITAL, tlOOfOOO. Interest Paid on Time Deposit*. Oenerai Banking BUIBHI Tiiuuarted UliWBflBUmMI Are conveniently and comfortably reached by-our two trains a day. The Limited, leaving Min neapolis at 7.25, St. Paul 8.00 p. m. daily, arrives in St. Louis the following afternoon. Combination Compartment and Stand ard Sleepers and Reclin ing Chair Cars. The Scenic Express, leav ing Minneapolis at 7.:*), St. Paul 8.05 a. m., except Sunday, arrives St. Louis earlv next morning. Sleeping Cars from Rock Island south. This is the most direct route from Minneapolis and St. Paul to Clin ton, Davenport, Rock Island, and all Mississippi River cities. Passengers by either train make close connections with lines south, southeast and southwest in St. Louis. aSK V0UR NOME A01NT FOR TICKETS Via TNC BUKLIN0 TON ROUTE Going to New York. ,V i* ii V' FEM-CURA rmn UAPUI. OraataatMOMdv for wiS. •UN-DOWN WOMEN. Cmsjlt km mt Famalc Weak- ness ^Our o!4 MUabta face balm uaed with our beauty plUa laaaraaa teaatlfol,clear and bnlliaat^comjilMtlon. Ladle* everywhere can ttDll make $3.00 tol^OO daj ageiiti. FEM-CURA CO. tl E. fth tC IT. P«UL%INN. First & Third Tuesday Each Month -vn- OHI -TO- VIRGiNIA, NORTH AND SOITH CAROLINA. For rates and information apply to I. P. SPIKING, N. N. P. I. C. S 0. RY. 338 Clark St.. Chicago. III. fctowanna ailroad This is the road that runs through the most beautiful .scenery and its ser vice is just what you are looking for— diners, observation cars, Pullmans, high back seat coaches and all very good. Inquire of your local railroad ticket arfent or write George A. Cullen, 6. W. P. A. 103 Adams Street Chicago. P. 8.—Our double.track roadbed is said to )M* the smoothest iu America. TO THE SOUTH VIA THE POPULAR Monon Route C. & L. Ry. 2 TRAINS DAILY TO Msii und west MM Springs Special Sleeper to the Springs. 4 TRAINS DAILY TO INDIANAPOLIS AND CINCINNATI Parlor Chair Cars Dining Cars on Day Trains Compartment Sleeping Cars on Night Trains For Folders, Tourists' and Home seekers' Rates, West Baden Pam phlets, Booklets, "Ten Routes to the South," addiesa FRANK J. REED, O. P. A. Chicago. L. E. SESSIONS, Qenl. Agent, 541 An drus Bid., Minneapolis, Minn. CALIFORNIA 5 Is the land of perpetual sunshine, fruit and flow ers, and the best way to get there is to take the OnlyShasta Route From Portland, Oregon. Dining Cars, Pullman Sleepers, and an tawed: Tin: Me Trains leave Portland daily at 8:.% a. m. and 8:30 p. m., reaching San Francisco in less than 36 hours and Los An geles 10 hours later. Portland to Los Angeles and Ret'n For illustrated pam phlets, maps, folders, etc., address, W. E. COMAN, a. P. A Portland, Oregon.