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-V I' ft' j- 1 5 A PAGE FOUR THIS DATE IN HISTORY 1403—Bajazot I., Sultan of Turkey, died. 1451—Amerigo Vespucci born. Died Feb. 22, 1512. 1566—David Ilizzio murdered. 1609—William Warner, English poet, died. 1616—Francis Beaumont, dramatist, died. 1661—Cardinal Jules Mazarin, pre mier of France, died. Born July 14, 1602. 1678—Ghent surrendered to Louis XIV. 1759—Mirabeau born. Died April 2, mi. 1757—Dr. Joseph Franz Gall, found er of phrenology, born. 1759—Treaty between Russia and .Sweden for neutrality of the Baltic. 1-773—Commodore Isaac Hull born. Died Feb. 13, 1843. 1796—Napoleon Bonaparte married :-1812—John Henry's plot to dismem ber the Union discovered. 1830—Petroleum discovered In Ken tucky. Bottled and sold as a medicine. 1847—Battle of Vera Cruz J862—Battle of the Monitor and Merrimac in the James river. 1867—Recognition of the Derby min istry- 1874—Millard Fillmore died. Born Jan. 7, 1800. 1882—Admiral James H. Spotts, IJ. S. N., died at Falkland Islands. 1885—United States hotel burned at Steubenville, Ohio. 1888—Emperor William I., of Ger many, died. 1892—Business suspended in North 'west by a violent blizzard. 1895—Belgian and French ministers expelled by Venezuelan government 1905—Senator William B. Bate of Tennessee, died. .'ij'- & Sentiment to Be Inculcated. "Let reverence of law be breathed by every mother to the lisping: babe that Bu rattles in her lap let it be taught in schools, seminaries and colleges let it be written In primers, spelling books and almanacs let it be preached from pulpits and proclaimed in legis lative halls and enforced in courts of justice in short, let It becomc the political religion of the nation." —Abraham, Lincoln. POLITICAL JUDAS. Two years ago when Mr. Duis was making his first race for the mayor alty tie was opposed then, as now, by a republican—Mr. Lander. The Herald at that time was an active supporter of the latter gentleman, and in its issue of March 25th, 1904, under the caption of "Non-Partisanship," it said, editorially: "Non-partisanship in a municipal campaign is all right, if partisanship is kept out of the contest. Otherwise 1 not. There is some attempt at pres ent to make capital out of the alleged non-partisanship character of Mr. Duis' candidacy for mayor. Mr. Duig i" a democrat, and he has a right to he. He is a member of the state cen tral committee of his party, as he has right to be. No one ever accused him of being indifferent to the welfare of his party, and the fact that he saw fit to delegate his powers to another at the meeting of the committee on Wed nesday, must be ascribed to a desire tc canvass on the streets for votes, lather than to party indifference. Just before the announcement of his can didacy a petition was circulated for -him by democrats, and among those who urged him to become a candidate are men of such pronounced party views that in their eyes republican ism is one of the greatest crimes on the calendar. One of the earnest and ardent supporters of Mr. Duis, is B. S. Brynjolfson, chairman of the state central committee, and everybody knows what sort of 'non-partisan' he k. No one denies the right of the can didate or any of his supporters to their own political views, or to mem bership in any party to which they see fit to belong. But to apply the term 'non-partisan" to the present ef forts of the democrats is misleading. Its purpose fs manifest If the demo crats can hold together in a fairly solid mass, and a sufficient number of republicans can be deluded by the 'non-partisan' cry the chances of the democratic candidate will be greatly Improved." The Evening Times is free to con fess that it is of the number that are unable-" to see wherein the condition of affairs .in municipal politics has in any wise changed sincfc the campaign Of 1904. Mr. Dui6 "Is the same' democratic partisan now as then true it is that he has occupied the mayor's chair for the past two years, but what, if any thing, has he done in hisjOfflcial capay city ii the interest of the. city thai Alight not or would1not have been ac ^jpbmjtlished. had the executive office been vacant for( that period? Inject, wherein his Mayor Duis been aught but offi^Cflgure WaA? Why should the Herald, whose edif tor haa ever pbeed tm being on6 Of the^ •.' .' /.: •••.•••• ."•• THE EVENING TIMES I JAKUABY, PRINTED EVERY WEEK DAY IN THE TEAS THE TIMES NJBUSBING COMPANY (INOORPORATED) WWII——AMP womiw H. H. LAHPHAM. EDROB. •.J. WM. H. ALEXANDER. CBCDUIini HlMtB tililiwll wiiiiiinilnlliiin In Tin ffiimlin Tlnna tin ml l~nit» TI T1 SUBSCRIPTION KATES DAILY I Tor in Advance (4.00 "™tl" in advance Ut (both by carrier .40 Waek by caerier. .15 WEEKLY Om Year in advance tl.00 Six Month* In advance .15 Three Xonthi in advance to One year not in advance ........ LCD Bnbacriben desiring addreaa ehanced.tnuat aend former addreaa aa!weiTaa new one •tared as second-class matter at the postoffice at Grand Forks, North Dakota. FRIDAY EVENING. MARCH 0. 1906 chief priests of the republican San hedrim in North Dakota, support one high in the councils of the democratic j'arty of the state when his Opponent is a loyal and consistent republican, has been a tried and true official in the past, one against whose probity and ability naught of a derogatory character can successfully be alleged, a heavy muni cipal tax payer and one thaji whom no man can have the welfare of the city more at heart? The political course of the Herald has ever been, like that of the "heath en Chinee," decidedly peculiar, al though it never required long or prduous search to discover the motive for its party recreancy, and no doubt tut that in this instance it? is merely 3. case of history repeating itself. THE PERMANENT CLASS. The advance guard of the immigra tion to North Dakota is beginning to arrive, and while, like the robins, there are only a few'to be seen, they are an indication of what the state may expect during the present sea son. Those who have feared that the rush to the cheaper lands of the Canadian northwest would to some extent, in jure the prospects of this state have little foundation upon which to base these forebodings. There will be a great rush to Can ada, probably the greatest ever known in the history of the west except in the opening of some of the Indian reservations in the last few years. But there will be plenty of people to stop in North Dakota. Many of those who are going into Canada are from the new states of the west. They are those who having taken advantage of the opportunities of a new country and realized the advantages of the change in property values from nothing to those of the richest country in the world, are ready to seek a second fortune by the same process. These are as good as citizens as can be found anywhere, and are the pride of any community. But there is another class just as progressive and just as energetic who do not care to endure the privations of frontier life and are ready to step in the places of those who are moving on, or to locate in a country which has passed beyond the primary stage of development. These are usually men of some means who having accumulated a competence sufficient for themselves in the older states, are going into the newer ones where their capital in -sested in cheaper lands will give their children a larger inheritance. These are the people who give permanency to a country. They are tot possessed of that restless spirit of caring push which makes them un happy when once the excitement of new conquests Was paled. On the contrary they are surround ing themselves in that period of life when the leaf begins to turn to gold, with the opportunities for their chil dren's success in life, and as these will remain until they too must seek a widening field as did their parents, the country is given a character of (permanency by their presence. In a large measure this is the class that is now coming to this state. They are nien with families who desire the advantages of schools and churches and societies, and who prefer the op portunities offered by these in this state combined with the splendid op portunities for certain success, in a reasonabe degree to the chance of suc cess or failure in a larger degree with the uncertainties leaning toward fail ure, without the opportunities men tioned. When these people come into the state they become at once citizens in truth as well as in fact. The pros perity of the state becomes', at once a jart of their ambition. They do not tuild for a day or a year, but for a life. They are interested in making per manent homes and surrounding them selves with every comfort of life. They want to make the land not only yield a competence for themselves but they want to leave it as an heritage to their children,, capable of yielding to them abundantly for their labor. These are the people who want to drain the Red" river valley that It may furnish wealth producing homes for their sons who want to Irrigate the semi-arid iands. in the west that\ there the desert maybe made to blos ,bo6 like tthe ^rose who are building •the brick blocks' la. tfe .cities and towns on the sites of tar papered shacks and lumber sheds who want the educational Institutions the best in the land, and who want the entire Btate dotted with farm houses in which luxury is the rule rather than the ex ception. There are plenty of such people in the state today, and more are com ing. Newer fields will attract the pioneers but the class that gives a community its permanency will stop by the! hundreds in North Dakota. A WOKE OF PROGRESS. The educational facilities of a Btate are measured by the people who ad minister its school affairs. In this particular it is plehsing to note that at the recent national edu cational meeting at Louisville North Dakota made a showing of which any state might be proud. In fact, this state was far in advance of any other —even those states which boast of their educational systems. There were seventy county super intendents present at the meeting and twenty-one, or almost a third of them, were from North Dakota. The reason for this lies deeper than the surface. With all the yellow journalism about corruption in fetate and county politics, and the cry of the political howling dervishes for reform, the men who have been charged with the administration of the educational affairs of the state are thoroughly competent to do so. Men holding the position of county superintendents in this state are head and shoulders above those filling simi lar positions in nearly every other state. They are interested in their work and in the advancement of the schools. Twenty-one of them were willing to travel nearly two thousand miles to attend a meeting at which they might hope to secure new ideas for the improvement of their work. The other states sent an average of a little more than one each. Education should be the substance, not the shadow, and the showing made by the county superintendents at Louisville, while reflecting the high est credit on the state, goes deeper than this. It shows, in contrast with other states, that those in charge of our educational institutions, especial ly those of an elementary character, are enthusiastically zealous in the promotion of their work. And as the lesults to be derived from the edu cational system of a state are depend ent almost entirely upon' the zeal of those charged with its administration, the advanced position of the state in matters educational was proclaimed in thunder tones at the meeting of the nation's eduoators at Louisville. A KING AMONG MEN. In these days when the bad in the world finds so much publicity that the people almost forget that good exists and that the sun shines, it is refresh ing to read about Duke Carl Theodore of Bavaria. He isn't much to look at. No medals cover his breast He has not led an army on to victory. And as for scandal, with which every court in Europe reeks—Duke Carl Theodore is 2 gentleman. He has been famous for many years and has just performed his five thou sandth successful optical operation. In Munich he has expended $1,250, 000 in building and maintaining hos pitals. He asks no fee from patients of any class and the poor are his special care. His wife, who was the Princess Maria of Portugal, aids him in his work. You cannot estimate what such a man means to the world. There is no standard by whijh to measure. He could pursue pleasure. He can live in an atmosphere of luxury speed in flying automobiles ride in special trains travel in floating palaces. Bu# because of the wonderful im I-ulsc for good that abides in- his breast: because of the divine desire to be of use to his kind, he has worked and made his efforts to count. Think of restoring to 5,000 human beings the flowers, the blue sky, the faces Qf loved ones, pictures, scenery, ambition, courage, hope, life itself. That Is the story of Duke Carl Theo dore-of Bavaria. Twenty-five years of patient, skill ful labor—all for others. It is a record fit for the pages of the Great Book of ife. It is enough to make one forget that wrong exists in the world.Ast. Paul News. The. open letter of ex-Mayor John. Dinnie to Mayor Duis, which appears elsewhere in these columns, as does also Mr. Dinnie's catagorical reply to a list of questions propounded by Duis' organ, the senile .Plalndealer, will undoubtedly entail nb end of ex plaining on the part of the mayor's corps of street corner and back alley era tors. *-Ai DOTE AID C0HRE1T i.ii|S£ The difference between a ballet and a ball is the extremity. V'f -3rw t* THE EVENING TIMES, G&AftD FORKS, M. D. some one will start on _a hunt tor Wellman. A Rnsslah woman carried' dyna mite in her hair. That's hothlng. Lots of women carry It on th4lr tongues. Since the shot has been taken from Brewer's stoipach there is additional room for liquid. The easiest money made Is what you did not have when your friend struck you for a loan. The man at the head of the Isle of Pines ruction was from Kansas. That explains the trouble. A book agent at Moorhead asked a voman if her husband was in. She said he was for ten days but it was nobody's business. There are more than eight thousand men in the country engaged „in mak ing laws, and yet &ome people cannot get the kind they want. A Canadian physician says he can cure bad temper. What a boon for*hus bands! There has been a change in medi cal practice in late years. Doctors do tot now read death warrants to their patients. A bill has been introduced in the Rhode Island legislature prohibiting divorce from any cause. What a llirusf at home industries! In the Japanese calendar this is called the time of the kicking horse. In this country it might have the same appellation in reference to the mule one generation back. Boni threatened to go to work if the Goulds did not pay up. Neither has happened. Arizona's Appeal. It was decided by the senate on Feb. 27th that the statehood bill, providing for the creation of one state of Indian Territory and Oklahoma and another of Arizona and New Mexico shall c«me to a vote on. the 9th of March. No begger she in the mighty hail where her bay-crowned sifters wait, No empty-handed pleader for the right of a free-born state, No child, with a child's Insistence, de manding a gilded toy, But a fair-browed, queenly woman, strong to create or destroy— Wise for the need of the sons she has bred in the school where weaklings fail, Where cunning is less than manhood, and deeds, not words, avail— With the high, unswerving purpose that measures and overcomes. And the faiih in .the Farthest Vision that bullded her hard-won homes. Link her, in her clean-proved fitness, in her right to stand alone— Secure for whatever future in the strength that her past has won— Link her, in her morning beauty, with another, however fair? And open your jealous portal and bid her enter there with shackles on wrist and ankle, and dust on her stately head, And her proud eyes dim with weeping? No! Bar your doors instead And seal them fast forever! but let her go her way— Uncrowned if you will, but unshackled, to wait' for a larger day. Ay! Let her go bare-handed, bound with no grudging gift. Back to her own free spaces where her rock-ribbed mountains lift Their walls like a sheltering fortress back to her house and blood. And we of her blood will go our way and reckon your judgment good. We will wait outside your sullen door till the stars you wear grow dim As the pale dawn-stars that swim and fade o'er our mighty Canon's rim, We will lift no hand for the bays ye wear, nor covet your robes of state— But ah! by the skies above us all, we .will shame ye while we wait! We will make ye the mold of an empire here in the land ye scorn. While ye drowse and dream in your well-housed ease that states at your nod are born. Te have blotted your own beginnings, and taught your sons to forget That, ye did tiot spring fat-fed and old from the powers that bear and beget. But the while ye follow your smooth made roads to a lireside safe of fears. Shall come a voice from a land still young, to sing in your age-dulled ears The hero song of a strife as fine as your fathers' fathers knew, When they dared the rivers of unmap ped wilds at the will of a bark canoe— The song of the deed in the doing, -of the work still hot from the hand Of the yoke of man laid friendly-wise on the neck of a tameless land. While your merchandise is weighing, we will bit and bridle and rein The floods of the storm-rocked moun tains and lead them down to the plain And the foam-ribbed, dark-hued waters, tired from that mighty race, Shall lie at the feet of palm and vine and know their appointed place And out of that subtle union, desert and mountain-flood. Shall be homes of a nation's choosing, where no home else had stood. We will match the gold of your mining, with its mint-stamp dulled and marred By the tears and blood that have stain ed it and the hands that have clutched too hard, With the gold that no man has lied for—the gold no woman has made The price of her truth and honor, ply ing a shameless trade— The clean, pure gold of the mountains, straight from the strong, dark earth. With no tang or taint upon it from the hour of Its primal birth. The trick of the money-changer, shlft ing his coins as he wills. Ye may keep—no Christ was bartered for the wealth of our lavish hills. "Yet we are ia little people—too weak for the cares of state!" Let us go our. way! When you look again, ye shall find us, mayhap, too great. Cities we lack—and gutters where chil dren snatch for bread Numbers—and hordes of starvelings, toiling but never fed. Spare pains that would make us greater in the pattern that ye have set We hold to the larger measure of the men that ye forget— The men who, from trackless forests and prairies lone and far, Hewed out' the land where ye sit at ease and grudge us our fair-won star. "There thou flings Lies wide on, the land to its bitter. shame, ana his- cunning parleylngs Have deafened, the ears of Justice* that was blind and slow of .old. Tet Time, the last Great Judge, is not bought, or bribed or sold. And Time and the Race shall Judge us— not aleague oftrafflcklng men, f. Selling the trust of the people, to bar ter it back again Palming the lites of trillions as a hand ful of easy epin. With a single heart to the narrow verge where craft and statecraft Joln. :*''m. .v '1 —Sharlot M. Hall. rel ugh the net that the trickster "MiA N Walter Wellman will start on a hunt Jor the poie.in a few months'. Later f. GRAND OPEBA. Oiir grad .oj»r& has- come^-Md'1 gone—ahd itww certainly ararttreat tor ^ie muslc^Wni. 'Xf omnM ttera A"' fi ,y iX mM *v are music-lovers and—music-lovers— but the audiente last night seemed to be .of the right kind, as there was very little disturbance or ^talking to inter fere with the music. I The devil is always supposed to be fascinating, and Mr, Harrison Bennett well deserves goodi praise. His mag nificent bass voice was ably managed in the "Blidy," grating music of Me phistophelean and his splendid phy sique was charyterl8tic of the part Mi. Maclennon is well known to many of us, having sung ih "Parsifal" last year. Faust was wonderfully interpreted by Mr. Maclennon, his voice being smooth, full and passloh ate, the high notes op the tenor sonfgs being taken with accuracy and ease. He is a thorough actor, and did not al low his excellent rendition of his diffi cult song role to outshine his dramatic powers Marguerite—every one likes Mar guerite, and Miss Miner stirred many hearts laBt nightf when she sang the well-loved song, "Yet Once Again, Be loved." Miss Miner's rendition of the famous "Jewel Song,", and the sever.il other coloratura selection? was well worthy of the highest praise. She showed an excellent control of her voice. Mr. Arthur Deane, who sang the ^art of Valentine, did magnificent work, his "Death Song" being especial ly fine. His work was much ap plauded. v.: Miss Albright's contralto, as Siebol, was a little unsympathetic, although she sang the,"Flower Song" exceed ingly well. The trio of Faust, Valentine and Me phistopheles, in the fourth act, was a wonderful piece of harmony, and the executors did fair justice to Gounod's exquisite rhythm and melody. The choruses were all that could be desired, and then (there 'was the or chestra. Never has a Grand Forks audience been so spellbound by an orchestra. About fifty instruments, truthfully harmonized, wailed and sobbed and laughed out this music if Gouijod's, until our very hearts were full. Mr. Emanuel is a thoVoughly competent conductor, and had the en tire cast of singers, as well as the or chestra, just at hid finger-tips. STORIES OF THE HOUR Killed With Kindness. They were discussing the horrors that attended on the hanging of Mary Rogers. "But she suffered little," said a physician. "Every murderer who goes to the'gallows or the electric chair is drugged to the point almost of un consciousness. Otherwise the :death sentence, unendurably hideous, would be abolished." "No man, alone in a cell with the knowledge that on a certajji day, at a certain hour, he is to be killed,, can keep his nerve. "He stops eating, he stops sleeping, in a little while he begins to shriek. "Then the drugging begins. With opium or with alcohol he is lulled Into a torpor. On the day of his death he is so heavily 'dosed as to be, to all practical intents and purposes, un conscious. "Condemned murderers, as the last day approaches, ar^ so wild with ter ror that it takes an incredible lot of aosing to compose them. I have seen men untouched by three grains of morphia, and a pint of whiskey would l:ave. no more effect on them than a small beer. "Thank, goodness, I say, that man is cl least humane enough, before he slays hfs brother, to drug the poor fel low into a stupor. Thank goodness that, when we kill legally, we kill with kindness^' Looking Out for the Company. Lancia, the chauffeur, crossed the Atlantic to New York on La Gascogne,'' and one nights in the stroking ropm of the steamer he "said: 0'' ."Your American Railroads are su perior to ours. The trains go faster, the cars are more luxurious.-and 4he management Is wiser. "I like your system of excess checks —those checks, each worth a dime, whiph you give ottj your railroads to assengers who, having no tickets, pay cash fares. At first these checks angered me. I did not like them but a conductor, with a good natured (.mile, illustrated their use, with a "He said that on a little railway in the south they do not use excess checks. A friend of his, riding on this fcailwajr. wlthbut^a ticket, paid his fare In cash, a matter of. four or five dol lars. I "The conductor took the money and counted it, and theu, Carefully, he put [art of it In his coat pocket and'the lest in the''hip pocket of 1iiS/panta-, loons. "'Why,' said the pasranger, you*' divide the money that IrayV f-i "The conductor, with a frowo^. re-. tiled:. 'The TOinf^y'sHgot' to get .ion$-: ,,Jc The horse was instructed to pack Thbmas'B little toy suit case, and he, without a whimper, kissed his mother good-bye and departed. Quite A .way off Thomas set his bur den on the ground, and, perched sol emnly on the curb, chin in hands, fell into deep thought The spectacle was too much for the fond mother, who was watching l^lm from a distance. Very quietly she started down the street and tiptoed lip behind Master Thomas. As.Bhe was hovering on the lolnt of surprising him with a kiss a pompous old gentleman appeared: "6hild," he said, "will you—hum tell me where Mr', franklin lives?" Thomas raised his solemn brown eyes, and regarding the old gentleman coldly, replied: "You go to h——. I haVe trouble's of my own."—Harper's Weekly. *-p Tactful. A Chicagoan waiT praising the late Marshall Field. 4 "Mr. FJeld was a kindly man," he said. "He spoke ill of no one. And when his opinion was asked of a' per son, and' it was not a favorable opin ion, he would express it In sucli a gentle and quaint way that its sting would (be quite lost. "Once, at a dinner, 1 praised the conversational talent of a man across the table. I said to Mr. Field: ':.\£ 'Do you know him?' 'I have met him,' the other an swered. "'Well, he is'a clever chap,' said I. 'He can talk brilliantly for an hour at a stretch.' 'Then, when I met him,' said Mr. Field, 'it must have been thfe begin ning of the second hour.'" Old Frenqji Gallantry. People say that old French gallantry is rapidly becoming a thing of the past. Those who are prone to forget thus our ..national traditions should take to heart this little lesson from the Hungarian poet, Jokai: 0 *At a banquet gi^en in his honor the poet thanked the ladles present, and ended with the words: "I drink to you, mesdames. May you live until my hair turns gray." The ladies were startled, and barely knew what to make of the strange compliment. Then Jokai, taking from his head a fine wig, revealed a head entirely bald "My hair, as you see/' Le continued, "can' never turn gray.". It don't pa^ to keep boarders'who: don't pay. So, pluck up your courage and tell Mr. and Mrs. Arrears 'that you need their rooms—as you will if you use the wants ads. in The Evening Times. NORTH DAKOTA. Whole Tear—for 25c. You send 2S cents in stamps for a years subscription to BROW NIB FARMER and learn all the facts about North Dakota, where the grreat crowds are going*. One4 issue Is worth several times the subscription price for Its views alone. Address. BROWN FARMER, Ikfandan, North Dakota. FRIDAY, MAKCH 9 ONE NldHT ONLY BEACH & BOWERS Cl despair of brevk-: tog her' HtMe boy tf ^eat^ threatened she wo«ld banl»h him from FIRST PART ENSEMBLE "Among the Poppies" PRICES ?:4la,n 11:00 «4m. V-) i.Tr IflK —'tr" home. The very next day he exploded "I- am .li*hohas,'' ''iia!d' the mother, "but I 'have never broken my word to you, so now you must, leave home." 1 t- Pfbfesspma) £arc^s physicians and bub^hdonb. JOHN FAWGETT M. H. a diseases op Moan um v|L4 eEREUL SBBONM. paw a Ona aitmeinaubtMUL, -V" DR. J. GRASSIC* Office Noriihf/eatara Balldlaf piS. W. RUTLEDGE "^r HOMEOPATHlC^^p- PHYSICIAN AND SUME0K 128So.3rd St. Qnd Porfa.ll. D, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. & M. CAROTHERS A-. •ri-ffi Attorney at Law Itattoaal Buk BiiMiif ARCHITECTS. J.W.ROSS A I E 0 ami SDPEIQffEHDENT OP C0NST1DCTI0II omoa irx-5 SouthThikdSt. GKAND FORKS, N. p. SMITH Architect Both' Pboae* NittaulBuk MHHihi W. J. EDWARDS ARCHITECT Northwestern Bonding, Grand Fbch, N. DV Northwestern 'Piiqm 46C-L TAILORS. ROLF BROTHERS HiOH &LASS SUITS ROR IIENf BothThoMs Offleein CUOorl BnOdW: tui, a v.i^gcr THE OLDEST F1IMIN THE BUSINESS 0 mom, Flour," Feed, Hay find! .V-'? Wood of All Klnitf j. N. W.*Proi(bSM TBI-8TATB5SS-L GRAND FOBK8.N.D TIME CARD OF TRAINS GRAND FORKS N i--'. $1.00, 75c 50c 25r TELEPHONE Arrivaa. 0tp.m.)i 4:l0«.n. 8:06 a.m. f-y4..r»L_ V'.'ivv 7a N ^w^FANITQRira. i: $•',. TAILORING —r*!! All Kiaft of Laities and Gents Qotliia4,7Qeaa and Pretrial N, W. 361-1 Tri State, 41S.R PHONE BICE'S TRANSFER FOB HACKS. DAT OB MIGHT AND BAG GAGE WAGONB AT ALL HOU8& PHONE 602L The City Feed Store r- pit If SOOTH BOUND, Sw u1' Minn'eapolte „and the Bast ».« To Red Lake Falls and Fertile (dally except NORTH BOUND. peg~T° wh^^'NtorP»afeIFIBank?SR^ :iep.m.—For I^rtmoi^, Devils Lake, itinot. Hi™ 4:H a.nL—Vor K+-Vrom IZ &ui, tapntkpoilt, 8b Tmav,Br9Ckei P-nu—For Httlaboro virt —From litQ p-tiuZIyor^Bm er*Sv* r^AiRerpM9| BreoXeo^ld^fe, ^aaelt«iwli|a] 1 ii I }:16 d. m. Grafton an^ WinniiM-Arr,Ve" 35^' v'l W, B. SINCLAIR wior aod •W&poUaan _-£ioiik -.Citjf, Dulntt'Supi $ Will mar,