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ri* •4 1 $r\ Sslv* *flr Wf -?s mhtf" ml' •Jliar, ,.""-."i.J (ft to. •4^ MV' ®v E$% 0c iiH^ IJw §i#matfk SStibutw. BY M. H. JEWELL. THE DAILY TRIBUNE. Published every afternoon, except Sunday, at Bismarck, North Dakota, is delivered by carrier to all parts of the city at 60 cents per aioath» or $6 per year. The daily sent to any •ddress In the United States or Canada, postage •repaid, $5 per year fS.50 for six months fl.SS for three months. THE WEEKLY TRIBUNE. Published every Friday eight pages, con taining a summary of the news of the week —local and foreign—particular attention being paid to state news. Sent to any address, post age paid, for $1 for one year 60 cents for six Months 25 cents for three months. The Bismarck Tribune is the oldest news paper in the state—Weekly established June 11, K73 Daily established 1881. It has a wide circulation and is a desirable advertising me 4ium. Being published at the capital of the ^tate it makes a feature of state news, of a •emi-official character, and is therefore particu Nrly interesting to all who desire to keep the (In of state affairs—political, social and bud- All exchange publishes the following which ihay be of interest to shippers: A .great many of the shippers of grain do not understand how cars should be loaded. Many of them fail to put as much in a car as the capacity de mands. The minimum amount should be loaded in each car. In loading wheat, barley, rye and flax, cars of 28,000 capacity should be loaded witfa at least 24,000 pounds, as that amount will be charged for whether the car weighs that or not. Thirty thousand oars should contain at least 24,000 pounds forty thousand at least 36,000 pounds fifty thousand' cars 46,000 sixty thousand cars 60,000, and eighty thousand cars 80,000 pounds. In load ing oats, 28,000 cars should contain at least 24,000 pounds thirty thousand cars should Contain at least 24,000 pounds forty thousand! cars 40,000 pounds sixty thousand' cats 60,000 pounds, and eighty thousand) oars 66, •00. The -minimum rate is always charged for cars not adequately filled. the present reported intentions of tbe president are carried' out in legis *q!tive enactment by congress, prohibit ing any campaign contributions by corporations, it is likely that the com ing presidential campaign will be tame. As a matter of fact, it is a ^lestion whether the use of money in ^presidential campaign accomplishes %yt=hing beyond the payment of legiti fete expenses, except on very rare oc .sions. The sentiment of the Ameri 4ui people is usually so well defined Chat no sum of money, however large, "Would change the result of a presi dential election from that intended by a majority of the people. Certainly no campaign fund would hare been ef fectual in electing Judge Parker at the last election, and the same is true, perhaps, of every presidential election in history with a very few exceptions. It is the principle that is objected to. and! the objection is sound and right eous enough. Twelve different lines of railroad aire -under construction in this state with an aggregate of over five hun dred milee of new track. No single fact in the progress of North Dakota this year more tellingly points to -the increased settlement and prosperity of the state than this. The extension of present lines and the building of new lines yeans the creation of many new towns, the building Incidental to this work, erection of elevators, settle ment of new lands, and one hund'red and one other evidences of growth and improvement. With a total crop value estimated at seventy to seventy-five .million dollar.., North Dakota wild not be lacking in Improvement and- proe perity .this fall. The Minneapolis Times has suspend ed publication after sixteen years of •unprofitable existence. The Times has been at intervals a strong paper and 'well edited, but seemed unable to achieve financial- success. The sub scription and business list of the Times has been absorbed by the Min neapolis Tribune, rt is worthy of note in this connection that on October 1st the Minneapolis Journal will begin upon the issue of a Sunday -morning paper, and with the Journal's well known energy and character, Minne apolis people are assured: of one of the best Sunday papers in the north west Ike steamship Dakota wfeioh met •with a slight aedidenit a month or so •go, left on Wednesday last on her first voyage to the Orient. Her cargo measured seventeen thnn**nA tons of freight, and among the distingoMied passengers were H. W. Dennison, the legal ^representative of Bands Komura, fob Japanese veace commissioner, and four other associates of *be fc»Ton Tt» Dakota thus becomes a historic •Wp in "carrying the returning peace envoys to their home 1 President Hill of ttw ck-ee* Northern wttway was the guest of honor of $the Minneapolis Club in Minneapolis a lew sights ago, and the assemblage gathered included the leading public aaft of W 2»*S St, Tina and Minneapolis, and a number from Hew York and other cities, gttl*.w$re jwesented if! 'ST*-* to him in token of his 67th' birthday, and! 'the event was an epoch-marking one in the world of busnees. Fred Falley says that he has not seen any new light in -the oapltol com mission that he has enough con fidence in the members of the commis sion from their standing as public men in the state to believe that they will do the best work they can in. obtain ing the capltol building for North Da kota, and that he is willing to leave it to them as the legislature was willing to do. The Wahpeton Globe remarks that the sudden'death of Marshal Haggart means at an early date the appoint ment of J. F. Shea of Wahpeton as United' States marshal. The Globe says that it had been planned that Mr. Shea succeed Mr. Hiaggant at the close of the latter's second term, and that Mr. Shea regrets as much as anyone the untimely dea/Kh of Mr. Haggart that will lead to Mr. Shea's early ap pointment r. Bank Examiner Chapman sprang a surprise on some of his friends and •was married at Minot the .past week, his official engagements being such that it was deemed best to advance the wedding from -the original date, October 11. Thomas EJ. Fox of Minot was best man. -Friends of Mr. dhap man through the state will unite in congratulations and good1 wishes. The receipts Of cattle in Chicago last week exceeded 90,000 head' of which one-half were western range cattle. This was excessive and re sulted in a downward' market. The Advocate is the name of the new paper at Bantry, the McHenry county new town where ex-Deputy State Auditor Ken Wylie, is now en gaged in the banking business* STATE NEWS The attention of the amusement seeking public is called to the fact that a LaMoure merchant is offering two half barrels of red paint at a bargain if taken at once. LaMoure wants a commercial club. BlsmarcK. is satisfied with the ordinary variety. Chief-of-PoHce Barton of Drayton, was almost killed last Saturday after noon by a gang of drunken toughs who he was attempting to arrest. In The Denhoff Voice Christian Kirschenmann of Herr advertises that he will no longer be responsible for the debts contracted by his wife, who .has gone somewhere else to get-away irom the name, W. A. Stickley o* The ITessendeb News has purchased The Kenmare Journal. :-V Dr. Stella Perigo of Denhoff, was ar rested and taken to Washburn, where ghe -was fined $50 for practicing with out a license. A barrel of 'booze Was captured from a bunch of Fins at Lakota and by order of the state's attorney -was destroyed by the city marshal. Now the question arises: What authority has the state's attorney to confiscate and destroy private -property, without due process of law? Minnewaukan Sittings: Sheriff John McLean of Devils Lake, came over from that place Tuesday and arrested William Wilkinson and Harry Chap man, two young men from Penn, on a charge of abducting two sisters named Emma and Louise Gessner, of the lat te. place. The two couple arrived in Minnewaukan by team Satarday even ing and were married by Justice Jones, Monday morning. It appears to have been a clear case of elojement and the young men were threatened with ter rible "doingB" from the young ladle* irate father upon their arrival home The sheriff left for home Tuesday afternoon with the entire party is charge. ty'Si The tomato crop seenis~ godd aT Grand Forks. Thirty people are ad vertised for to pick the vegetable on one farm alone. -r'" EE^utah News: a wlerdt picture var witnessed Wednesday evening when tbreshing operations were being push ed on James Aticrtin's land near town. It -was 11:30 at nigfct and dark, and tAe erew was working to finish a cer tain amount before the threatening rain. Huge stacks of straw were ablaze all about, and the smoke from the engine and the men and teams in motion, with an occasional flash of lightning, made It a scene fit to be placed in one of Anderson'* fairy tates. The task was completed, too. Two men of St: Th&^.' Jailed for poker playing, want $1,000 damages eacfo froca the town, they were arrested and Jailed wftfeoot MS Be/# *m» REVIEW TABLE. With the publication of its present (October) issue The Metropolitan Magazine begins a new volume—the twenty-third of its Interesting career. It is only fitting therefore that this new number should be of more than customary Interest and beauty, that it should be an augury of the good things literary and artistic to oomti. It in augurates its ne# period of usefulness at the very beginning with & cover of exceptional coloring and drawing done by Blendon Campbell, reproduced by the finest meitho*d of color processes. The October cover of the magazine is to use a somewhat trite expression, "worth framing," if ever anything of is kind deserved that recommendation The first number of tbe hew volume number XLAT3, of The' Outing Maza vine, if it is to set the standard for those to come afterward, presages a goodly amount of unusual literature On topics ranging from one end of the globe to the other, as is the custom of the magazine in question. The piece, dte resistance of this number is, we suppose, the opening chapters of Al fred Henr* Lewis' new story, "The Throwback," which is to appear in serial during the year. Throwback, we find, means a degenerate—a back slider—and is, in this case, applied to a certain young Alan Gordon, ty "hip father, who views his son's incorrigi bility as a sign of atavism. One would hazard a guess that "The Throwback.' will be the best among many good men who will play a part in this story We find Mr. Lewis writing from the start with that virility that is his foremost characteristic. For the sportsman there is much good read ing: "The Choicest Game-Bird," by Lynn Bogue Hunt "Skittering for Pickerel," by Clarence Deming "Stalking on the Scottish Moors," by A. Vachell, and a truly humorous exploitation of the Maine guide-book fairy, tales by William Hickox in '^Angling by Guide Book." What is the true twentieth century adventure story—the adventure of brain, not of bloodshed, of great issues, not of visible pe-ils? PeAaps there is no better example of such a narra tive than Mr. Lawson's account, in the October number of -Everybody's Maglq. zine, of that supremely daring brigand of "frenzied finance," F. Augustus Heinze, the Montana opponent of "Standard Oil.'' No duelists ever had more at stake than Heinze and Mr. Lawson in their memorable war of millions, waged In a single night, when both men. risked everything— and Lawson won. More somber aq terrible, if no more thrilling, is that, picture of the Russia of the mHnen,t which Ernest Poole gives in his stalk ing article, "Peasant Cattle," which condemns the brutal Cossacks from their own mouths. To check the de velopment of such enemies, of society as these two articles portray, the state of Ohio founded its Industrial School tor Boys, a wise, cheerful institution of whkfh Eugene Wood, in this iarae of the magazine, gives a readable and unconventional account. An article that will interest men almost as much as women In Eleanor Hoyt Bralnerd's illustrated description of the group of efficient young men who are "The Artist Dressmakers of Paris"—Worth, Paquin, Beer, and the rest The won derful career of "EUa Bawte Reader Financier,': by Juliet Wilbor Tomp klns, is continued in tJhls number, and the autumn theaters are thoroughly discussed in "The Players." W- J. Carrick was partly burned oat near Man dan this week. The fire was started by persons burning Are guards. It was so windy that the fire Jumped the Btrip BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNI. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1MS.^ of plowing and crossed over the prairie. Beaching Mr. Oarrick's place it burned his ihay and barn with harness and other things of value, the only animal being burned wae a which was tied' in the bant. The loss a a $ 3 0 0 A v: (Wr«t publication Aug. 28, ttOS^w Ssl Notice to Creditors. In tho matter of the estateof ElUott 8. MUler deccagod. Notice is hereby given by the tsderiintd vflFSSz «iUer' aflmllll«tratri*of Ihe estate of Elliott S, Miller, late of the city oi Bismarck, in ihe county of Bnrleigh and state oi North Dakou. deceased, to the creditor* of, and all persons haring claims against deceased, to exhibit them, with the necea sarr Touchers, within fonr months after tke first publication of this notice, to said ad ministratrix at tier residence in the city of Bls marck, in said Burleigh connty,North Dakota. Dated Aurnat28, A. D. 180J BOUCHER, PHILBR1CK COCHSANE, Attorntya for Administratrix. GERTKD0E MIliLER, Administratrix. SO TEAM* PATENTS 2srs«*%S Taum HH THEPENBHYNDIYEB8 FBAT8 OF THESE RECKLESS PA0IFI0 OCEAN ISLANDERS.. They Ave Ahnt the Most Darlac of All Catsrwatw Worker* Paialy* nla, SMsrlcn s^d IUa( Kay Are Aaoat the Dsunsrern Tksr Btm. Three native divers famous tor their deep water feat* came out in a pearl ing sloop with ns one afternoon and gave a fine exhibition, says a writer in the^ London Graphic. Die bed over which we halted was about ninety feet under the surface. Our three divers Btrlpped to a "pareo" apiece, and then, squatting down on the gunwale of the boat, with their hands hanging over their knees, -appeared to meditate. They were "taking their wind," the white steersman informed me After aboqt five minutes of perfect stillness they suddenly got jap and dived off the thwart The rest-of us fidgeted up and down the tiny deck, talked, speculated and passed away the tiine tor what seemed an extraor dinarily long period. No one* unfor tunately, had brought a watch, but the traderk and schooner captains all agree In saying that the Penrhyn diver dan stay under water for full three min utes. At last, one after another, the dark heads popped up again, and the divers, each carrying a shell or two, swam back to the boat, got on board and presented their catch to me with the ease,, grace and high bred courtesy that .are the birthright of all Pacific is landers. As a general rule, the divers carry baskets and fill them before coming up. Each man opens his own catch at rice and hunts through the Bhells for pearls. Usually he does not find any. Now and then be gets a small gray pearl or a decent white on? or a big, irregular "baroque" peattt of the "new art" variety, and once in a month of Sundays he Is rewarded by a large, gleaming gen*, worth several hundred pounds, for which he will probably get £20 or £80. •V Diving dresses are eometlmes used In Penrhyn, but in such an irregular and risky manner that they are really more dangerous than the ordinary method. The suit is nothing but a helmet and jumper. No boots are worn, no clothing whatever on the legs, and there are no weljgits to pre serve the diver's balance. It- some times happens, though .wonderfully seldom, that the diver trips, falls and turns upside down, the heavy helmet keeping him head downward until the air all rushes out under the Jumper, and he is miserably suffocated. The air pump above Is often carelessly worked, in any case, and there Is no recognised system of signals except the jots that mean "Pull up." 'They're the most reckless devils on the face of the earth," said a local trader. "Once let a man strike a good bed of shell, and he won't leave -It. He'll stick down there all day, grab bing away In twenty fathoms or more till he feels paralysis coming on"— "Paralysis?" •. "Yes—th^y get it, lots of 'em.- If you was to go down In twenty fath oms—they can do five and twenty, but. anything over Is touch and go—and stay 'alf the day, you'd come up 'owl* lng like anything and not able to move. That's the way It catches them, and then they must get some one to come and rub them with sea water all night long, and maybe they dies, and maybe they're all rlgfrt by morning. Bo then down they goes again, just the same as. ever. Sometimes a man'll be pulled up dead fit ihe end of the day. Sow does that happen? Well, I allow it's because he's been working at a big depth all day and feels all right, and then, do you see, he'll find something a bit extra below of him, In a holler like, and down htfll go after it, and the extra fathom* or two does the trick.. "Sharks? Well, I've seen yon pop ping at them from the deck of the Duchess, so you know as well as I do how many there are. Didn't 'it them even when the fin was up? That's because you 'aven't greased your bul let I suppose. Ton want to, if the water Isn't to turn it aside. But about the divers? Oh, they don't mind sharks, none of them, when they've got the dress on. Sharks is easy scared. You've only got to pull up your jump ers a bit, and the air bubbles out and frightens them to fits. If you meet a big sting ray if 11 run its spine into you and spoil the dress, so's the water comes in, and maybe it* 11 stick the diver too. And the* big devilfish Is nasty. He'll hold you down on a rock, but you can use your knife on him. The kara mauaa la the worst The divers don't like Mm. He's not as big aa a Shark, bat he's downright wicked, and he's a mouth on him as big as 'alf his body. If an onoo comes along VU bite an arm or leg off the man anyway and eat *lm outright If 'e*s big enough to do it Swordflsh? Well, they don't often come into the lagoon it's the fishing canoes outside they'll 90 for. Yes, they'll run a canoe and a man through at a blow easy enough, but they don't often do it "About the diving? Well, I think the naked diving is very near as safe as the machine, taking all tkluga. Wont of tt la. if a kara mauaa or an onoo comes along, the diver can't wait his time till it goes. No, be doesn't stab it— not Inside the lagoon—because thetefr too many of them these, and the blood would bring a whole pack about He gets under a ledge of rock and hops* tfll go away before his wind gives out If be don't he gets eat" cfcswflaMfc Our burins— In Oils world fif tiot 16 succeed, but to continue to f*H In good splritfe'-Hobftt tools Stevenson, Oppression is tesult-Juntas. -s r^- »ith flngoing .r QRacks fall,.of GORDON HATS wherever the best drugged men Imich ordme To rest on SundajriL^We work six days in the week from early morn* ing until late at night, and with YOUR HELP can rest Sunday? Our store is open every night ex cept Saturday nighty until nine .o'clock, and on Satu:day night until eleven o'clock, giving those. who? work, two hours, live evenings, and four hours the sixth, to do wha buying the^wish to? II VOU ARE WITH US caU in and express your opinion of ouif/g movement. Very truly It won't be long TIJI You1 Will stort 4 We have some odds and ends in Window and Door Screens to Close Out I The Bismarck & Washburn Lumber Co, Main Street between 6th & 7th Streets. Phone 17 BISMARCK, N. D. /3rt-r -v' r* nW« Southern Railway In «nnect^ wHh toe Queep ft Oresoent Bouie to certain points In Alabama, Gougia, Florida, North and South Carolina Kentucky. Tickets sold on the B1BBT AND THIB© TUBBDAY IN BAOB MONTH W NOVEMBER 1006 St the very low rate of one fare for the round trio sre good Ut dsys, end for stopovers south 'of the Ohio nty- dttm2 95® W4Y £vr Information about fana iandsjasinass Iocs iSaa ft ^ftft your fires This Is 1 Fires Get yofir Property Insured with. jl Pi S. M. r&ti '^8 1% ibraNBi: tilTIi nn Plon©«fr UUi' Agenoy, t^tToi BBTTLiaS TIOICMB Wfllbe A» hays# Jmt, I*nd A Indu»tritl A. Q. P. A,, St LouiSfMo.