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'?'?$'{''' Om 8le I W. -T .V t- 'i }V •y':'\-'- ••H..,"-v.-.vw' •'... •./ FOUR •.J. SMALL. 1 rJ Month by carricr THE EVENING TIMES B8TABLIBBBD JJUTOABY, 1906 PRINTED EVERY WEEK DAY IN THE YEAR 1447—Humphrey, Dulie of Glouces ter, murdered. 1533—Michael de Montaigne born. 1551—Martin Bucher. reformer, died. 164S—King Christian IV. of Den mark, died. 1757—Edward Moore, celebrated dramatist, died. 1781—William Stockton, one of the signers of the Declaration of Inde pendence, died. 1S42—Lord Ellenborougli made Gov ernor General of India. JS47—Battle of Sacramento. 1854—U. S. steamer Black Warrior seized by Cuban authorities at Havana. 1861Territory of Colorado formed. 1S71—Congress set apart Yellow stone Valley for a national park. 1874—Arthur Orton, the Tichborne claimant, sentenced to 14 years' penal servitude for perjury. 1X78—Bland silver bill passed over the President's veto. 18S7—Mrs. R. Drues hanged at Her kimer, N". Y. for murdering her hus band. 18S9—Sir Julian Pauncefote appoint ed British minister to Washington. 1890—Ex-Congressman W. P. Taul liee of Kentucky, shot Charlies E. Kin Itaid, a newspaper correspondent, ,-.t Washington. 1890—British steamer Qnetta sunk ill Torres straight, Australia 100 lives lost 1S94—Governor Flower signed Great er New York bill. 1001—William M. Evans died. Born Pel), ti. ISIS. 1905—Mrs. Jane L. Stanford of Calif ornia, died. Seatlmeat to Be InculcateA "Let reverence of law be breathed by •very mother to the lisping babe that rattles In her lap let it be taugrht in schools, seminaries and colleges let It be written In primers, spelling nooks and almanacs let It be preached xrom pulpits and proclaimed in legis lative halls and enforced in courts of Justice in short, let it become the political religion of the nation." —Abraham Lincoln. TEACHING PATRIOTISM. The teaching of patriotism in the public schools needs to be encouraged. When the youth of a nation grow into maturity with the idea thoroughly instilled in their minds that the men vho have been foremost in the mak ing and keeping of the nation were little below the gods, and that bv their virtue and purity they are entitled to a place in the national galaxy similar to that occupied by the saints in the religious calendars, and in addition to this, they are made to believe that the public men of today are corrupt, and :i horde of barterers in national honor, they are apt to have their idea of the blessings of a free government very much distorted. Let the respect for the institution of the country and the faith in the peo ple who administer them be lost and the nation becomes a seething mass of political discontent, that, must spend its fury in national dissatisfaction. It has been charged by historians that the fall of Rome was due to the corruption of the patrician class. Yet this corruption^was not. half so much responsible t(Wthe national can Ker that finally destroyed the body pol itic as were the brainless demogogues who, to accomplish their own dam liable purposes, forever kept the fires of discontent and dissatisfaction burn ing in the hearts of the people. These leaches on political charac ters succeeded in reforming Rome, but In doing so they dragged her from the position of the proud mistress of the world to that of a miserable groveling sycophant at the feet of nations which were unworthy, so far as art and learn ing and intelligence were concernfed, to unlatch her shoes. Had the demogogues of both the north and the south been suppressed by the hangman's noose, and thus per mitted the calm and sober judgment of the peoples of the two sections to have considered the elimination of the slave curse, it would have been accom plished without dotting the land with unknown and unmarked graves, thick as the stars of a midsummer sky, and made an army of mourning widows and orphans larger than ever followed In the wake of a world conquerer. Demogogues had taught the south that those of the north who oppressed slavery were traitors to^ the sacred principle of states' rights while those of the north equally loudly proclaimed that the south was ever ready to break the bonds that held them to the union Of States, and were thus at heart, trai tors to the nation. Repltltion of t|iese things for gener ations so poisoned the public iiitelll- mi*: 'W-& -v MS pYfy r* PUBLISHING COMPANY (INCORPORATED) PCBUSHKM AMD PSOPBIKTOKB 1 H. H. LAMP MAN. EwToa H. ALEXANDER. CntCVUMlON IfAMAOEB nunlcatlona to The Evening Times, Grand Forlu. N. D, SUBSCRIPTION RATES DAILY WEEKLY $4.00 One Year In advance tl.00 236 Six Months in advance 76 40 Three Months in advance £0 Oae Week by caerier. Subscribers desiring address changed must send former address as well as new one IK One year not in advance 1.50 Bntered as second-class matter at the postofflco at Grand Forks, North Dakota. WEDNESDAY EVENING. FEBRUARY 28. 19Q6 UNIONj^utBEO THIS DATE IN HISTORY sence that neither would accept the word of the other, and the germs of evil thus propagated were only re lieved by a conflict at arms, the scars of which a half century has- hardly been sufficient to eradicate. The youth in our schools learn well of the virtues and wisdom and patriot it in of the men who have made the history of the nation, but they do not karn that these same men—Washing ton, Jefferson, Jackson, Lincoln—were all the subjects of attack from the men of their times whose lack of brains and abundance of words for ever estopped them from standing with those against whom their cal minations were directed. Let both sides be taught the young, and they will be able to judge of the merits of both the assailants and the assailed. A few years suffice, however, to blot from the pages of history the names of those who have directed their as saults against the men who were mak ing the nation's history. Who now when he thinks of Lincoln can recall Vallandingham, the Ohio copperhead? Yet in his day he was the foremost of those who attempted to prison the pub lic mind against the motives of the president and his advisors. AVhen the characters of the illus trious dead, stripped of the criticism of jealous rivals, be contrasted with the characters of the men of today, while the words of their calminators are still ringing in the unthinking ear, end the mind of the future citizen must be indelibly stamped with the idea, er roneous though it be, that our country is nothing but a festering mass of po litical corruption, unworthy of the love or loyalty of men. Such ideas instilled in the young minds work damnation to the nation, increases anarchy, and lowers citizen ship by reducing the standard of those into whose keeping the affair's of the people have been entrusted. FIBLIC OWNERSHIP. Publicists are generally agreed as to the meaning of the great changes now progressing in American politi cal sentiment. The country, we are informed, after wrestling successfully with the problems of the accumula tion of wealth, is ready to concern ft- self with the equitable distribution of what has been accumulated. We' are growing rich almost too fast. We pro duce such vast quantities of every thing needed by mankind that we hear of "production overrunning consump tion." In this new condition Clarence S. Darrow, the well-known Chicago law yer and student of economics, sees the explanation of the growth of sentiment favoring public ownership. Writing in the International Quarterly, lie takes advanced radical ground as fol lows Public ownership sentiment has had a remarkable growth in the United States during the last ten years. This sentiment is one of the many manifes tations of the dee]) conviction that the present division of wealth is at once unjust and absurd. All sorts of theo ries for the more equitable distribu tion of wealth have found ready advo cates on the platform and in the press in every enlightened nation of the world. However various the plans and schemes of social change, it is beyond dispute that the tendency of all na tions has been toward a wider and completer collective life. In every country in the world the people have been constantly enlarging the func tions and duties of the state and poli tical organizations are more and more becoming industrial institutions. In Europe, municipal and even na tional ownership of public utilities is no longer looked upon as radical or new, and the rapid growth of these ideas abroad has had much to do with sentiment in the United States. The most casual student of Social question has likewise seen the enor mous fortunes that have been built up by the private ownership of public utilities. The larger part of all the stocks and bonds issued by public service corporations are based upon franchises and not on private prop erty. By this mean? the public Is con stantly and systematically taxed upon its own property, and this vast tax, in the shape of interest on bonds and dividends op stock, is taken by a hand ful of exploiters and stock-jobbers— who haye Uius contrived to build ap private fortunes from public wealth. Perhapd the longevity or most actors may, be due to enforced walking a^ a means of exercise if The Winter Stars. Across the iron silence of the night A keen wind fitfully creeps, and far away The northern ridges glimmer faintly bright Like hills on some and gruy. dead planet hard Divinely from the Icy sky look down The deathless starB that sparkle over head, The Wain, the Herdsman and the North ern Crown, And yonder, westward, large and bale fully red, Arcturus, brooding over fierce resolves, Like mystic dancers in the arctic air The troops of the Aurora shift and spin The Dragon strews his bale fires, and within His trailing and prodigious loop in volves (•rowing Old. When we do not like to frolic In the soft and downy snow. When we do not go in raptures if it packs just right to throw, When wo sit inside and grumble Just because the day is cold, Though the boys outside are playing, it's a sign we're growing old. When we do not care for coasting On it brand new painted sled, Hilling gaylj on our stomach, Heels perched higher than our head To the top then walking briskly With a lady ten years old, Dragging upward her sled also. It's sign we're growing old. When a wagon past is rumbling With a driver who is kind. And we can't find joy ecstatic Just in hitching on behind. Taking chances with the others In a smnv bank to be rolled When the team goes round a corner, It's a sign we're growing old. When wc do not welcome winter As the best time of the year. But prefer the good old summer Or the springtime, it is clear That we've lost the taste for some thing we valued more than gold When we long for its departure It's a sign we're growing old. —Anon. NOTE AND COMMENT Nobody but man ever said he was the noblest work of God. A St. Paul girl turned masher and broke the nose of another masher. Most people have no need to slander themselves. Otlier people do it for them. Some men would go to business early if it would cause a scandal in church. The time lost in telling your troubles would enable you to stay till after the sermon. When a man is prosperous he has no use for friends. When ho isn't they have no use for him. A Kansas City man held his head on the ice till it caused death. Usual ly the ice is put on the head. East Grand Forks is jealous. Inter est in municipal affairs on this side has detracted attention from their own. Will the man who knows all about the primary law tell how his candi dates can get on the ticket by peti tion? An inventory of the men over fifty would indicate that there were few promising boys in the last half cen tury. A Chicago professor claims our an cestors were rabbits. The proof that they are nowadays is easier estab lished. A La Crosse girl was adjudged in sane because she was always giggling. The insane asylums will have to be enlarged. If food tastes better served from clean table linen, what effect does the kitchen clothes worn by the average woman at dinner have on .the hus tand's appetite. A Grand Porks girl received a mar riage proposal by wire. She inquired how many words she could send for a quarter, and when told ten, sent "yes" ten times in reply. A newly-married Crookston man who had ten girls before his marriage, l.ad to cook his own supper a week after the marriage because his wife was attending a social function. AMUSEMENTS Leading Artists With Savage Opera Company. Music lovers who have already en joyed the excellent performances of grand opera in English by Henry W. Savage's famous company in former years or In other cities, will find sev eral of the favorite singers still with the company this season. The corps of principals this year has been great ly augmented by combining the "Par sifal" and English grand opera com panies, giving Mr. Savage the best equipped organization during its ten years successful history. The choral forces number seventy voices and a symphony orchestra of fifty musicians including many soloists brings the company's roster up to more than 150 people. The leading artists now in clude the best English speaking sing-, ers on the grand opera stage. Among them are the following: Tenors—Alfred Best, Francis Mac lennan, Joseph Sheehan and William Wegener. Baritones—Arthur Deane, Thomas David Richards, Winfred Goff and George White. Basses—Harrison) Bennett, Martin L. Bowman, Ottley Cranston, Robert Kent Parker and Joseph Parsoni} 4 3, THB WMW, TIMES, OBADB 'wm,'k D. Sopranos—Florence Easton,, Helen Petre, Gertrude Rennysga, Madame Martha Miner. Contrajtos and mezzo-sopranos— Claude Albright, Winifred Baldwin. Margaret Crawford and Rity Newman. STORIES OF THE A Long Look Ahead. 4 The lonely Pole Star and the Lesser Hoar. —Archibald Lampman. "Beveridge," said Senator Crane to the Indiana senator, "there are three of us in the senate who have been looking around a bit, talking about presidential timber. We have decided that It looks pretty good for Fair banks in 1908. Of course, senatorial co tii'te.sy decrees that we must be for him then. But, after that, we are for you, Beveridge, we are for you." "When?" asked the flattered Bev eridge. "Oh," Crane replied, its he moved away, "you can count on us in 1920 without any doubt." Didn't Know What He Was Talking About. Jacob Riis, at a convention of school teachers at Atlantic City, de cried contentment. "There is too much contentment," lie said. "Contentment is often a euphemism for conceit. It is through dissatisfaction and not through con tentment with ourselves that we im l.rove. "Every man is too apt to be con tented—that is, to be conceited—to think himself about as fine, and strong, and good, and wise as any one in the world. "Even beggars! Why, I know a gentleman who, by being accosted by a beggar, said: 'Why don't you go to work? Why do you waste your time begging?" "The beggar drew himself up. 'Did you ever beg?' he said. "'No of course not,' said the man. 'Then,' said the beggar, 'you don't know what work is.'" Failed for Want of Capital. While you boys are talking about pioneer days, let me relate the his tory of a Kansas town," said an elderly member of a group at a news depot "The start was all there was to it. It was a paper town, but it would have been' a humdinger if we'd only had $167 cash back in the fifties. I was one of three fellows who, tired of Leavenworth, set out in "57 to find new worlds. On the third day we struck a beautiful spot, with trees and water an deverything inviting. 'Let's start a town here,' said one. And we did. We platted It New York city. Thus far we spent no money. But when it- came to booming the place, we found that the printing alone would cost $167. "'Where was the town, did you say?' asked one. "That's the question. It was the outlet to' the Indian hunting grounds, just where the buffalo trail and the grounds met." Hoist by His Own Petard. There is a general interchange of passes among railroad men, and the president and the vice president of the Pennsylvania railroad have passes' all over the country. President Rob erts is,a very strict man. One stormy day in winter he got on the New York division and took a seat in the middle of the car. The conductor knew him, as they all do, and when he passed him the president simply nodded. It was a catch, and Roberts was only trying to see if his man would break the rules and not make him show his pass. The conductor fell into the trap. AVhen he passed again, Roberts arose fiom his seat, and tapping him on the shoulder, said: "See here, you have not seen my pass." "No, sir," faltered the conductor, "but—but I know who you are." "That makes no difference," retort ed Roberts, with a frown, "the rules are made to be obeyed and not to be broken. The rules laid down for your guidance say that any passenger who has neither ticket nor a pass must pay his fare or you must eject him from the train.", "I know, it," replied the conductor, "but—" "No 'buts.' Now you may go." "I haven't seen your pass yet, though," demurely remarked the tick et puncher, wishing to demonstrate the thoroughness of his* lesson. "That's right," replied Roberts ap provingly, "make no? difference be tween the president of the road and the poorest passenger." He reached in his inside coat pocket and then into his vest pockets. The conductor grinned. Roberts' sallow complexion grew fcaler and then red der. He went through his prickets again, but no passes. The conductor's smile grew more expressive. "Humph!" exclaimed the president, "singular! Just stop as you pass this way. again." The conductor stopped, and the president dryly handed him a $5 bill and told him to take oy the'fare. Iffe had left his book of-passes office. A re. He at his What the Delegates'Think of Grand Forks and the State, C. H. Dancer, assistant chief en gineer of public works: "I have en Joyed my brief stay in your city, and am glad to sae so progressive a place^ :s Grand Forks. I came through here' in *81, and the progress of uie city since then is amazing. .This is a splendid hotel and the proprietors, Mr. Wood and Mr. Bacon, are ideal hosts." Mayor C. A. Nye of Moorhead: "I Lave paid a visit to the filtering plant and the electric light."plant as well, and can say without hesitation that both seem to me to be models of their kind. We are interested in Moorhead in such matters, as we are improving our plant there, and I am investigating plants wherever I have an opportunity. The ones in this city are being run economically, I should say, and in my opinion the cost of the same is considered below that of other cities of the same size. The filter is a grand thing, and you should be proud of the same." Judge E. M. Bennett, Sisseton, S. U.: "This is. a fine city and the Dacotah is the best hotel I have seen in a city of this size in years of travel. I am enjoying my visit, and you may say for me that I recognize the push and enterprise of the citizens of Grand Forks and do not wonder that you are heard of abroad. Your newspapers are well up to date and of the right sort to make a town move on. You are to be congratulated." Mayor Hamilton, Morris, Man.: "I note the improvements in Grand Forks every visit I make and am only TOO glad to express my compliments upon your hospitality, push and en terprise. Grand Forks is all right and bound to be a city of size and •com mercial standing. You have the ight sort of timber here to make it such." J. E. Paulson, Hillsboro: "I have lived in the valley for thirty years and am naturally interested in the welfare of its cities and the farming community in general. We need drain age here as well as in Manitoba and if conducted along economical lines it will be ji good thing. Grand Forks as a city is all right—it always has Leen and always will be, in my opin ion." F. .Atkinson, Bismarck: "I have great faith in the future of North Dakota and believe that every loyal citizen should do all within his power tc further its interests. Grand Forks in recognized as a hustling city, anil i' is worthy of the name. As for hotel accommodations, hospitality of the people and every thing that goes tr make a visit pleasant, it cannot be excelled." George A. Ralph, Minnesota: "You newspaper men all know where I stand in respect to North Dakota and that I consider the interests of this a sister state as directly incident to the progress of Minnesota along the valley in which we have so much 'In common. You are to be congratulated upon having citizens here who do things besides talk. Grand Forks is a city which is bound to keep on in the march of progress, and I always enjoy a visit here." Senator Cashel, Grafton: "I am inclined to talk too much I fear some times, but I can never say too much for North Dakota and for Grand Forks as well. Grand Forks is bound to be cne of the leading cities of the north west, and Its reputation is not confined alone to North Dakota or Minnesota. 1 am proud to be a citizen of the state and believe that this drainage move-, ment Vill be fruitful of good results in the future." ROOSEVELT'S INTERFERENCE In Coal Miners Mntters Objected to By Them. Kansas City, Mo., Feb. 28.—John C. Tarsney of this city, a' member of the Southwestern Operators' association, who also was a member of the scale committee at the recent Indianapolis conference, is quoted today as saying: "President Roosevelt's intervention between the coal miners and the oper ators, although in the interest of peace, is unwarrantable interference." RAN ABOUT TOWN A long sucker, frozen in the center of a large cake of Ice, caused several dead game 6ports to lose a bunch of money the other night. The fish and the block of ice reposed on the back bar of a well known thirst par lor on the East Side and the fish was viewed with curiosity. Finally some one started a discussionC by stating that if the fish were released from its prison of ice it would revive and con tinue to live just as if there had never been any ice. Another man dis agreed with the first and a general ar gument followed. One fellow said that was the way fish spent the winter months, regular ly. Like snakes, he said, they re mained in a comatose" condition all winter and when the Ice melted in the springtime they were just as frisky as if summer bad continued all win ter. The discussion became very heated, and bets were laid on both sides of the question at issue. The cake of ice was split and the fish placed In a tub jof lukewarm water, but at last reports he had shown no signs of life. The backers of the re suscitation proposition wouldn't give up the money until an old fisherman came in and said: "Ef you hadn't been a pack .of derned fools you would have knowed that feesh was dead be fore it was ever friz up lik, ethat." A good story—and one that .has the merit of being strictly true—is being told at the expense of a certain street commissioner in a 'city .which shall be nameless, but which, is located not a thousand miles from Grand Forks. A party of interested citizens took it u) on themselves to remonstrate with him regarding? the unsanitary condition of the fcity sewers, made So for want :.f the necessary flushing, w%h hritt KeenA attended totonly at rare Intervals, con tending' that In their present condition they were a dangerous trienacp to the public heal breedlng-plai I "The English language is one that few of its users can have any Juck with," said a well educated citizen the Man the other day. "A young friend of mine, discussing politics, de clared that one 'rigamee' went out and another 'rigameen' came in. Not un-/: til I thought of the word 'regime'{could I imagine what he meant. "Another mentioned some circum stance which he declared had filled him with 'charging He meant 'cha P'ln.' 1 have a friend who suffered for years from 'insomonia,' not knowing that it was 'insomnia' all the time. "I suspect that our mother tongue is the only one In the world that cannot be spoken by its own children. And it we, who are brought up on the ian tguage, cannot speak it, what can we expect fropi the foreigners?" They are telling a story on a certain society girl of this city who, like mWny others, has numerous strings to her bow. At times, so the story goes, she finds it difficult to keep fronp mixing her dates and to keep the numer ous young gallants who worship at her shrine all jollied along in a satisfac tory manner. Something happened the other day when one came too early, another not early enough and a third delayed his departure a trifle too ling. According to the story, the sparring by the young men for anvexcuse was pitiful in the extreme. "I make it an invariable rule" said Mr. Stormington Barnes, "not to talk about myself." "Indeed?" "Yes. When I was asked recently who the greatest Hamlet was I refused to answer." PHONE RICE'S TRANSFER FOR HACKS. DAT OR NIGHT AND BAG GAGE WAGONS AT ALL HOURS. 41B DeMera, iw1*' Flour, Feed, Hay and Wood'of AH Kinds N. W. 'Phonb EM TBI-STATB G36.II WEDNESDAY, *EBRUABY and a most prolific. for the deadly microbe.^ official, wh6 had just been paying his'devotions at the shrine of Bgcchhs, became righteously indignant and, while admitting that !n point of cleanliness the sewers were not altogether like unto Caesar's wife, denied most emphatically that such a fearsome thing as a microbe had its abiding place In them, adding that to make assurance (ioubly sure he would ntake' a personal investigation which, with the aid of a lighted lantern, he promptly proceeded to do. Thus far the result of- his quest has not beeii'' given to an interested publlc.tVv#rsf~ PHONE 6t)2L The City Feed Store DOWNEY FT PFEIFER. PLOP&J S 422 DBHBU AVE. GRAND FORKS. N. TELEPHONE 67 Train AU Arrives. 1 8:00 p.m. 2 4:10 a.m. Departs. S 8:05 a.m. 7:35 p.m. 7:45 a.m! 10 1 33 8:05 p.m. 84 7 :R6 137 1SR 7:45 p.m. •189 7:45 .m. 140 11:00 a.m. 11:00 a.m. •201 •202 1:40 p.m. •205 I •206 7:20 p.m. *DaiIy except Sundays. -.V' I 3 'I •3Z&1 •.'3m Are. YtV •v- 't & Professional Cards pkY8ICIANS'AND SnRaBONafr, :v JOHN FAWGETT, M. A„ H.D. DISEASES OF WOIEN GENUAL SCttHNf onto* I-if Orai 8TAH0arauST0u.' TELEPHONE M. Office NpHhwestaFa/Bulldla^g^p^^p' 5,. Corner D*M«n Avanuaud Fourth StraeC. u, PANITORIUM b|tlls Hone Annex. TAILORING All Kinu of Ladies and Genta Clothing, 'Clean ing and Freaain|. N. W. 561-L Th State. 41S-R -silis S. Wi RUTLEDGE |Sff§§tg, HOMEOPATHIC rHYSICUN AND SDIGE0N 128 So. 3rd St. Grand D. xpr ATTORNEYS AT LAW. National Baik BriliiaJ ARCHITECTS. J. W. ROSS ARCHITECT hJ SUFEIINTENDENT /OF CONSTRUCTION omoi 11-2 South ThudSt. GRAND FORKS. N. R. L. SMITH A v"* -)'i'-'' 'l W. B. SINCLAIR Agent 8:16 p.m.—Fop Larimore, Devils ^ake, Mlnot. Havre, Spo kane, 8eattle and £ortlanA. 4.25 a.m.—For Hillsboro, Fargo, Fergus Falls, 8t Cloud. Minneapolis and St. Paul. Minm.Zvw west, Larimore to Wllllaton., p.m—For Fisher, Crookston, Ada, Barnesville, Fer Sof.i S"8'i^V Mlnneapolfa, St. Paul, Bemldjl, Cass Lake, Superior and i/tlIUt!L —From St. Pain, Minneapolis, Sioux City. WII jna^. Breckenridgre, Fargo ana Hllls- p.m—For Hillsboro, Fargo, BrAkehridge. Wlllmar, Sioux City, Minneapolis .and int. Paul. —From Duluth, Superior, Cass Lake, Crookston, St- Vincent, Greenbush and Fisher. S. a. m—b or Fisher, Crookston, St. Vincent. Greenbush. Bemldjl, Cass take, Superior and Du 8:20 a.m.—For Mtato, Grafton, Neche' and Winnipeg: —irom Winnipeg, Neche, Grafton and Minto. 4.45 p.m.—For Minto. Grafton, Cavalier and Walhalla. —Prom Walhalla, Cavalier, Grafton and Minto. 6.00 p.m. For Emerado, Arvilla, Larimore, Northwood, Mayvllle, Casselton and Breck6nridfre! —From Breckenrldge, Casselton, Mayviile.'Nor^ wood, Larimore. Arvilla and Emerado: (Connections with No. 4 at Larimore. 1 8.45 a.m—For Emerado, Arvilla. Larimore, Park River Langdon and Hannah. —From Hannah, Langdon, Park River, Larimora, Arvilla and Emerado. —W: B. SINCLAIR, Agent. ,The Northwestern Limited Finest Than to Chicago!^ Not only ONE car, but overy ear in the tfain ia new. Sleeping cars of new designs, with larger berths and more comforta Vd cbnvenienceB, not only the Bleeping care, but chair cars and coachei are more atrongly built, having heavy steel frame re-enforced with steel girders in such a way as to secure a strength to stand any emer geney. Besides the "NORTH-WESTERN LINE" protected the' entire distance from Minneapolis, and St Paul to CUcago by the Block Signal System, the best't':' known devlce |or the safe handling at trains. Try the NBW NOHTH-W^STBRN? tfsW'-v- LIMITED on your next trip to Chi .•^rV ,wo and be convinced of Its su-'-V: '^Perlority. TICKET OFFICES Minneapolis, I* /.' Bobprt St ,LV. _..(Byan HoMt St Paul. li M. CAROTHERSi "j- Attorney at ?v»4 -jh Architect Bejtfc FhoM* Natioui Beak BUMiM W. J.EDWARDS ARCHITECT Northwe»t*rn Building-, Grand Fork*. N. Northwcatern 'Phone 48B-L TAILORS. ROLF BROTHERS^ Makers of HIGH CLASS SUITS FOB MEN: Both*Pboiiqp Office In Clifford Bolldiiw. & SVJt W