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Is? •OUR A I.-/ |&rf. Si? glue jtenmrrfc WMnt Every Morning Except Monday and Weekly. Bv M. H. JEWELL. Publication Office: 200 FOURTH STREET. COR. BROADWAY •UUbthhcd \Z\ °ldMt in Telephone—Business Office, 32 Editorial and Local, 18. 'Subscription Rates: Daily by carrier 60 cents a month Dailv by mail P*r a Weekly by™ ail $1.50 per year No attention paid to anonymous contribu tions. Writer's name must be known to the editor, but not necessarily for publication. ADVERTISING AGENTS: La Coste & Maxwell, 140 Nassau Street New York. North Star Daily Press Asso ciation, Germania Building, ,St Paul,.Minn.. for business in Minnesota, Wisconsin and South Dakota. Manuscripts offered-for publication, will be returned if unavailable. Communications for the Weekly Tribune should reach, this office on Wednesday of each week to insure pub lication in the current issue. Correspondents wanted in every city, town and precinct in the western part of the state. All papers arc continued until an explicit order to discontinue is received, and until au arrearages are paid. Entered as second-class matter. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENTS STATE. For State Auditor. is a on republican I hereby announce myself a rep candidate for reelection as state auditor ot North Dakota. .. _. I shall continue to reside at Bismarck ana give the affairs of the office my personal at tention, as I have during the present adimn- D. K. BRIGHTUILL. ,For Attorney General. 1 herewith announce myself a candidate on the republican ticket for reelection to the oftice of Attorney General of the State of North Dakota. If re-elected, the present poKcv of the ofBce w«H $ E For Secretary of State. 1 am a candidate for secretary of state. 1 am a farmer, a soldier, a schoolmaster and a republican. If elected, I shall move my family to Bismarck, and perform well the duties of the office. "Ie have been preaching S E COUNTY. Announcement. 1 hereby announce myself as a candidate for reelection to the office of county treas urer, subject to the decision of the repub lican voters at the primary election to be held in June. If elected, I will, as a servant of the people, attend to the duties of my office faithfully, impartially and to the best inter ests of the taxpayers of Burleigh county, R"PeCCA& RbsWZKY, For County Commissior»*r,, -J' I hereby announce myself ixfn candidate on the republican ticket fo JM\e office of rounty commissioner in th ^Third district, subject to the republican voifjs at the general primary election to be htjf'm June. I am resident _of CjgpRd, a farmer and will iute xpg.'er. it MmKtd to the office, I the tefr+teSir *hi\ity, look after the of the county, faithfully, impartial in compliance with the laws of our field, N. D.. L. H. ONG. February 1910. For County Auditor. hereby announce myself a candidate on republican ticket for election to the of fice of County Auditor. If elected I will, to the best of my ability, serve the people, by an honest and just ad ministration, and to the best interests of the «!-.nayers of Burleigh county. Respectful^ E A A For Sheriff. 1 herewith announce myself a candidate on the republican ticket for election to the office of sheriff of Burleigh county, subject to the decision rendered at the primary election to be held in June. JOHN P. FRENCH. For County Judge. I hereby announce my candidacy on the re publican ticket for the office of county judge of Burleigh county. N. D., subject to the ap-land proval of the republican voters at the general primary election to be held in June, 19W. I have been a resident of the county for thirty years and know the needs of the coun ty, and I faithfully promise that if elected I will fulfill the duties of the office impartially and will transact the duties of the office in a manner to benefit the public at large as well as the tax pavers of the county. WILBERT FIELD. County Auditor. I announce myself a candidate for the office of County Auditor on the republican ticket. If elected I shall administer- my official duties faithfully and to the best interests of the taxpavers of Burleigh county. T. P. BARTEL. For County Commissioner. I hereby announce myself a candidate on the republican ticket, subject to the voters at the primary election, for commissioner in the Second d'istrict. 1 have been a farmer in Sibj|ey township for nine years, and if elected 1 will serve the people of Burleigh county to the best of my ability. CHAS. G. PORTER. For Sheriff. 1 to be held in June. MORE GOQP ADVICE FflQJKHU** al«|BsvBut' up your cards, as iard If we mistake not, James J. Hill was one of the first of the country's business men and economists to point to the inevitable increase in tife |q§£ the of food products to result from the [as drift away from the farm. Before the matter was generally discussed, Hill -}n repeated interviews stated his'belief that food products would grow higher in cost and the cost of living largely increase if the farm acres in this country were not made to produce more heavily and if the farms were not better cultivated. In a recent address before a body of Minnesota commercial men Mr. Hill repeated his beliefs in the following effective address: Everybody depends upon the ground and its products. An entire crop failure for -one year in the ag ricultural states of the northwest would mean a shortage in the food supply of the nation that would have dire results., You as retail mer- ._ ii,„""'„1„ me eiuuuu fifteen hiillion of chants depend upon the sale, and trin of rotation of cropstherdoc fo the past twenty-six years and during the past two or1 three years ceived more, encouragement than ever before. "I have tried to impress upon the people that' they dare not take any thing out of the soil without putting something back. For every bushel of wheat produced by the soil some thing must be given the soil in re turn. It has been only a few years since the state of Minnesota was new, but as it grows older more care must be taken to prevent exhaustion of the properties of its soil. "I was surprised to receive a let ter the other day from a man who criticised me for agitating the ques tion of rotation of crops, and who ex pressed his disbelief in the virtues of my arguments. There can be no question of this necessity. Every experiment station and every practi cal farmer who has used advanced methods of preserving the strength of the soil agree that rotation of crops must be eventually adopted in all agricultural communities. The land will not renew itself. "The cause of the increased cost of living," continued Mr. Hill, "is the result of two things: First, the na tural increase in the population of the nation, and, secondly, the fact that production has not increased. The truth of the latter statement is in the fact that our national export of agricultural products has been decreasing in the past few years. "There are proportionately a far greater number of people living in the cities of the United States today as compared with the population of the rural districts than ever before, declared Mr. Hill. "In 1868 but 20 per cent of our people were living in *.he clil^. Today .the percentage it,' over 4u per cent of city dwellers, with the soil. "In the past twenty years the American people have at least learn ed how to spend money with a free hand, if they have learned nothing else," said Mr. Hill, amid laughter. "As tl people better their condition remainder tillers of the tow. In conclusion Mr. Hill predicted that from the present outlook, the agricultural states of the northwest will enjoy at least ten or fifteen yfears of continued prosperity, and that, in his opinion, with the use ot improved methods of farming the there: Is Wo 'reaso»':why that prosperity should not continue in definitely. "Keep the young people on the farm." he urged *'it is the best place for thqin." Tom Hancpck of the Edgjeley Mail, is on a trip south and finds other states with peculiar laws.. In a re cent letter to the Mail he says: 1 hereby announce myself as a candidate for the. office of sheriff of Burleigh county, on ther republican ticket, subject to the de-' ». cision of the voters at the primary election Individual Caught Violating the law A N BARNE S For County Judge. I hereby announce myself a. candidate on the rcnuhlican ticket forrejection-o. the of fice of County ludge of Burleigh county, subject to the 'primary election to be held in Junp. If elected I will conscientiously discharge the duties of the office. i\~ Respectfully submitted to the decision of the people. G. T. KEENAN, Bismarck, N. D. County Commissioner. I hereby announce myself a icandi-. didate on the republican ticket for nomination for the office of county commissioner for the Second commis- Kansas isJa funny state, and has some very funny laws. Immediately upon entering the state all drinking cups and glasses were removed from the cars, and each individual desir ing a drink of water, Was! {compelled ti hustle his own drinking apparatus. There i« no law against drinking the water on the cars, but there is against drinking intoxicating liquors. A man didn't dare to pull the cor] out of a bottle*, for fear there might be a spotter on the train and any would be pulled, rushed before a Justice, and soaked the usual fir One maa tested the law, and it co him five Ivundred dollars tp_ find out •that it was constitutional—which was more than I cared to pay for a drink of the cup that cheers. In order not to offend any^qf the sensitive people of Kansas, we put up our glasses, and downed our alchoholic drinks— how we did it must remain a mystery. We were hailing with pleasure the coming of the state of Texas, as a great many were getting tired of running through a state with such drastic laws. We just got nicely in- sloner district pf (Burleigh county, subject to the decision of the voters to Texas, when a gentleman came in at the primary election to be next June. ld LYNN W. SPEKRY to the car and said: "I am sorry, ladies and gentleman, but you will i*i'j' playing is not permitted in Texas. You can play dominoes, if you de sire.!!"? That was the last'straw and air was blue for a few moments, the order meant.the breaking up of a very interesting whist game. That fool law certainly came in for some hard knock*. "Nothing agriculturally is more fascinating than to study the corn crop of the United States. Cotton used to be king, but corn has de throned cotton, and has rolled up figures that simply take you off your feet, writes J. George Frederick in T' Travel Magazine for March. Corn grows in 120 days from its planting time. Out in the great corn belt, during 1909, the corn farmers made the ground give up to them $15,000,000 every day of those 120. whatever helps you helps every one dollars were poured into their laps streams and the big irrigation ditches. else. until a grand total of $1,720,000,000 ^rnder iien up. AllUnited ro ears are going on there will find as interesting as any sight seeing on the face of the globe. VALLEY CITY WOULD BE POTATO MARKET they better the table which they sit market the year around where pota down three times a day," he contin-.toes could be sold at the current ued, "I don't believe in hoarding market prices. In addition, the ware money. It has it's uses for doing house would be equipped with stor good, but I do not believe that it' is Valley City, Feb. 26.—C. Lee, of this city, is trying to interest the business men of Barnes county as weil as the farmers in making this a big potato market. The first step proposed by Mr. Lee Is^ a 'potato warehouse where many tho'udailds of bushels of potatoes could tie,''stored and from which they could be'Shlpped at a medium cost. Larimore, N. D., has1 such a warehouse and" potato market, and last year shipped several hundred thousand bushels of pota- I BISMARCK DAILY TRI^UNI. •UNPAY MOANING, FEBRUARY 27, 1910. the gold ans sil- a a to thJfl :co -rn of Frank Young and Eric Johnson of Minatare. Neb., recently returned from South Omttlju, where they sold cattle ttyey have been feeding sixty cent cjprn. The margin of profit wan so ginall that they failed to buy several carloads of feeders to fatten, as they intended, but instead arranged with Fish CoimniSHioner O'Brien to send them all the fish to which they are entitled according to the size of their ponds. They will obtain other fisb in tile east as soon us the ponds and d,t(,|lc In other words, every day from the "SWoethf °P011- a lot8 a in otne woras every aa iro tn .o.f Yound said9. time the corn farmers put the seed ..and al a re in the ground, fifteen, millions of water. Fisb would thrive In these he a rtot re a oantd he whole State to thed gates, ifflsh PPJKIJ last year it was worth enough to( ..,t buy entirely new clothing, jewlelry the fish business in western Nebraska, and personal adornment for every where there is always a good market man, woman and child in -the coun«, And this is only corn. Wheat and or cotton are not far behind. Wheat business in western Nebraska, never fetched such a price for the where the water is pure and cold. The irrigation ditches make ponds be tween the hills and are themselves farmer since 1881 as it did last year. And no, cotton planter has received such a high price for his cotton since 1871. ,. No wonder farmers are buying automobiles. No wonder that the rural and semi-rural districts of the country Colo., where are positively the most interesting part of our country today. Things „,.... —i Men's Chivrlry to the Frisd Goddess or the Fireside. As \v im- t-rt'iiiiwitly admit,- it is our «'lii»-::!ri!'.is iv^jirt! I»»r «i»ni ui whk-Si ii'.nii us id di'sit-H thiii s!i«« sii:t!l coniim' ln'i- "imliy jidrninililH run-glt's to I In- ilin^ ill i:tll llltlllf illltl llic fcfo-lir.jj «l 'Mir tiM-s. Shi* is lemli'iclub au«i li-.iit. .'.ml so tirac rlmi she shall i)il fur niontt'iit dro| Iter rule as tli»- jrm!lr:isf tic honst'lK l«l Thi'iv is- initlii:.': Hint sn luiisi-s mir :ilni'»sl siv n-il iMlti'ir-uinn :is to scf •mr .ow p:trUrt:Hi- s« dtK'ss with :i (.''SIJIMU i» IIIH' |IM!M! .-i frying |iun in iui otlv er Lot us never di'surt this nljjh ttU'.si of wonuinlioixl IIIH] its lofty |iir|sf In, lift' P:irtiul:irty lt»f us mil do so IKVHIIWC if a wotnnu does not keep th«« housf it: will not be kept. Would we men enginiH-r and prepuce l.)!." meals in one year? Would we wash dishes 1.0fKi times, wipe them 1.095 limes, sew. darn. mend, devote our lives to a gray monotony of treadmill effort? Not on your life! Our chivalrous re gard for adored woman would not per mit it And we would go crazy within six months if we tried. I know of nothing that we should cling to more closely than this chivalrous regard for our womankind, it saves the cost of many and many a hired girl. I have peuried this little tribute to man's chivalrous regard for woman because anybody can see that it de servos It. Woman, the housekeeper (and nothing elsei. the fried goddess of the fireside, the queen of her domes tlQdomnin. with stewpan for a tiara aflid a stove hook for a scepter, let us together pledge her, while we register owr chivalrous vow that we will keep her where .she ls unless [we men need h^r as a stenographer or something else. In which event our chivalrous re gard may stretch a few points.—pall-. A 1 n^rativ!6 ^TuV^l'n^J *Z delivered on Dec operative stock company after the ,- „„„.Hoi .!««,.. «. plan of the farmer's elevator and engage an experienced and competent potato buyer. The company would contract with the farmers for pota toes and would maintain an open ce to be rented to foreign a 8pa respectable for people to squander buyers. For instance, potato buyers from the south must have storage until they want their consignment, as they cannot keep the tubers in their climate. money that other people have earned for them. "For the present year 4,000,000 automobiles have been ordered for the people of the United States. At an average of $1,000 an automobile, this would amount to $400,000,000. No one cent of this $400,000,000 is invested in anything that will pro duce one single bushel of grain." Manager E. S. Delancey of the Northern Seed Co. favors the project. He suggests that in addition to the potato cellar that a large warehouse be built above to be used as a pub lic warehouse. He considers such an institution invaluable to the city if rates are to be secured for local shippers. (!°^«SL!WF TOUSIELY ON E DOSE ENDS INDIGESTION Profit on 8ttfrB Too 8mall, Two TN«bra¥k«M Say. -Ui Two Nebraska1 farmers, disgusted with the small profits of feeding cat tie, are arranging to fatten fish in stead of steers, and the ponds and Ir rigation ditches of the western part of the state are to be stocked with food varieties. for to carry ^, ... gstocked »8the onco ii a at W a re goln) 0 fresh flsh." Mr. Young formerly owned a big flsh poijd at Seward. Neb., and made a profit from it. Now he is going into adapted to fish culture. Bass, pick erel, pike and perch are to be used, and some trout will be put into the clearer ponds and ditches, arrange ments having been made to get these from Bozeman. Mont., and Leadville, the government a Trt Tur-ta 15 I each year one-hal* dozen fat ducks, one-half dozen fat roosters, dressed, to be delivered Nov. 1 of each year, and three barrels pf best- quality wheat flour, to be delivered one bar rel each time on Jan. 1, May 1 and Sept. 1 of each year twenty bushels of good eatable potatoes, to be deliv ered on demand two pounds of fresh butter each week, one dozen fresh eggs each week, one quart of fresh milk each day, except Saturday one half gallon of fresh milk and $40 in cash. $20 on March 1 and $20 on July 1 in each year." NOVEL EXHIBIT AT A FAIR. Sixty Artists Each to Give a Picture on a Single Theme. Sixty or more of .the foremost illus trators, newspaper artists and carica turists in America will each contribute to an exhibit at the coming Actors' fund fair in New York city a painting, drawing or sketch on the same theme —an actress having her slipper tied by a man. This theme, entitled "Beauty's Toll," was announced the other day by Al bert Sterner. W. D. Stevens and H. S. Watson, the artists in charge of the exhibit, after a meeting at the Flayers in New York. All the pictures, some of which will be done by artists who never received less than $500 for. a single piece, will be given to the fair, which will run from May 9 to 14, and will be sold at auction at its close. A MARRIAGE 4NC0ME. Pittsburg Pastor Fixes the Figure at $2,000 a Year. The Rev. Wright Gibson, pastor of the McKees Rocks Presbyterian church, in Pittsburg, recently notified engaged couples among his parishion ers that he did not purpose to unite any couples unless the Intended bride groom could prove that his income was at least $2,000 a year. The minister declares that with the present price of commodities this in come is necessary to -live. '"Poverty leads to divorces," he said, "and I do not purpose to assist the divorce cause.'.' ., #f• Australia's First War Vessel. The first unit of the Australian navy was launched at Govan, Scotland, the' other afternoon, Mrs. Asquiih doing the honors. In naming the ship the Rrlt» ish premier's wife said^..-. "Firstborn of the jfomStaonwealth of Australia's nayyy I vtui&e you Farta nsqtta. God' b!ess yo#?* May you up bold tlie glorious traditions of the Brit ish nqvy in the dominions over seas." The Parraynatta is"n toi]edi» boat de stroyer of the improved river cl-.is-^ and registers 700 tons. a that travelers LIVING NO WORRY TO IMtM. completing the circuit of eight clubs, Old Couple's Unique Disposal of Thsir Illinois Farm. Otto Meyer and his wife, Mary, have solved the difficulties attending the high cost of living, as far as they are concerned. They have lived for years ion a thirty acre farm near the village of Riverside. Cook county. 111. By a deed filed in the recorder's office the other day Meyer, for a considera tion of $6,000 iu cash, conveyed to his son. Fritz H. Meyer, the farm. But in return for this the eider Meyer is to be furnished with all the necessaries of life, including a house, regardless of the market value price, as long as he or his wife Uvea. A part of this unique deed reads as•• follows: "TJUB ^rAPJSse .is -to. iffioyldft.,!!. ,aujB-„ dent supply of fruit, a sufficient sup ply of -vegetables of all kinds, to be delivered on demand one dressed, hog of 200 pounds weight, one fore quarter your meate don't fit coirnVntably,'*"1* or you ifeeJ bloated after eating and you beWeve It i» tine food which fllte you df wlhat littleYyou eat lies tike a ilump of lead on your stomach, If thore }s difficulty in breathing after, eating, eruofcattons of sour, undigested food and acid, heartburn, brash or a belching of ga» you lean make up your mtfnk) that you need something to stop food fermentation and cure in ddgeation. M- To maka every bite of food you eat aid *n Dhe nourishment and strength'cloudy and warmer Sunday Monday of your ibody, you miust rid your atom- probably fair and colder, ache of .poisons, excessive aoM and stomtadh gas which sours your,entire mead—interferes witih digestion and causes so many sufferers of dyspep sia, siok headache, ibiMousness, «on fltitXatton, griping, etw. Your ease Is no different—your are a stomach sufferer though you may call it by some other maime your real isAnd only trouble is that wihidh you eat does not digest, ibut quickly ferments and sours, producing almost any un healthy oondltion. A case of Paipe'« Diapepain will cost fifty cents at any iph&rmacy here and wS convince amy stomach sufferer five minutes after: taking a single dose that fermentation and sour stomach is causing the misery of in digestion. iNo matter if you teall your trouble catarrh of the stomach, nervousness or gastritie, or by any other name— ailways remember that a certain, cure is waiting at guy drug store the mo ment you diedide to begin its use. Pape's Diaipepsin will regulate any out of ordeir stomach within five min ute®, and digests promntly, without aojy fuas or discomfort all of any kind of food you -eat. TWO NEW MEMBERS. has Winona, Minn., Feb. 26.—Red Wing and Rochester, Minn., today quali fied for admittance "into the Minne- Wisconsin baseball league, with Winona, Duluth, Eau Claire, Wausau,'- LaCrosse and Superior. i1 I ".Tii BISMARCK, A few Reasons Why Oar Stert Should Your Store S A Hart-Parr Tractor Will the Work of 22 Horses And Do It Cheaper, Better and Quicker NORTH DAKOTA NOTES 2HOM WASHINGTON, D. Cf Washington, Feb. 26.—Rudolph Ouleman was today recqmmehd.ea far postmaster at Hebron:^ Attorney General Miller left for his home in North Dakota immedfc a he I on of FftCG C&80 Judge Guy C. H. Corliss will deliv er an address before the Yale law school at New Haven before he re turns to North Dakota. •At. TBI-STATE WEATHER 1- i''- (By AHsOflated Pri'sn.1 an Washington, Feb. 26.—Minnesota Fair Sunday warmer in western por tion Monday unsettled. North and South Dakota—Partly THE GEM BISMARCK'S FAMILY THEATRE Entire Change of Program Today. Matinee at 3:30. Evening at 7:15. 1 OVERTURE Lochntr's Orch estra. BIOGRAPH COMEDIES. The Test. In a Hempen Bag. JEROME AND JEROME—Pre senting, "The Fisherman and the Eccentric Frog." "ACROSS THE CONTINENT," SelJg Feature Sconic Film. MACK AND BENNETT Comedy Sketch, "The and the Toothpick." •In a Maid EXIT—Lochner's Orchestra POPULAR PRICES 25 Cents. Children, 10 Cents. TRACTION ENGINES Before buyjng a Traction Engine examine "The Dakota Gas Tractor." All steel gears. Three speeds—1$, 2$ and 4 miles an hour. Sold by F. Jaszkowiak, Bismarck, N. D. Constantly flooded with daylight in every nook and corner making it an impossibility, even on a cloudy day, for you 'o be mislead on any color or fabric—years of experience in our busi ness—representatives of our country's best makers of clothing— togs and shoes for men and.boys—and— Believing in the old adage,"live and let live"—we close each evening at 6:30 except Saturdays—thereby opening our doors every morning with the vim and vigor to give to each customer the GOOD SERVICE to which he is justly entitled—Are you with us? BRING YOUR REPAIRING, DRY PYE^OB^TO US. CLEANING, PRESSING AND S. E. BERGES0N & SON Commence-the new year by using economical power on your farm. Purchase a Hart-Parr tractor and learn how to make more money with less work. A Hart-Parr tractor does the work of twenty two horses and will run a day for what it costs to feed ten horses. A Hart-Parr tractor uses cheap kerosene for "feed" and starts instantly and runs until stopped. iHart-Parr tractors are substantial in construction, simple in op eration and accurate In adjustment. Its parts are made of the 'best material dbtainaible, and it is made to run for years. With a 'Hart Parr traetlor you.' can plow 25 acres a day^and do other farm work equally ag quick. Farm( economy demands the use of a Hart-Panr tractor to iplow, seed, harvest, thresh, shell icorn, grind feed, shred corn, and in fact, do anything you can do with a big ibarn full of horses. ...,,. There are over GO NORTH DAKOTA O successful, farmers in the Dakotas who are using Hart-Parr tactors, and if yoir-will send for our new 1910 cat alog, you will want to own a (Hart-Parr tractor too. Any question you may ask in -regard to applying Hart-Parr tractors to farm power will ibe answered toy French & Welch Hardw. Co. BISMARCK, N. DAK. 'f I