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PAGE TWO I MRS. A. r. Stoaa* Trteprone. 78» h. W. The Weaker Sex. "The woakor six," they cull them, but a mortal couldn't make. In speaking of the womenfolks, a more profound mistake. Those piwious parcels made of smiles, of ribbons, tears and lace. Have clearly proved themselves to be the "Samsons" of the race. Do you suppose that any Man could keep me half the night In some beshadowed hammock where mosquitoes fiercely bite. And who. it mattered not how long he might prefer to stay, Could press my hand so lightly I couul never get away? And Where's the giant with the strength to make me walk and walk About the park and- babble forth the softest kind of talk. And buy ice cream and lemonade and popcorn bars and such And then declare I had enjoyed the evening very much? know a tender, "clinging vine" who, bv her winsome smiles. Has made me. lazy as I am walk sev eral hundred miles. I've stood outdoors on winter nights and waited for her when I'd not have waited half so long for fif-a teen dozen men. The women are the ones who rule this planet tirst and last They bind us in their mystic chains and hold us good and fast. But though we men are shackled slaves, we mutually agree We'll never do a single thing to make them set us free. —Nixon Waterman in Good Housekeep ing. Fancy flat, braids will be used on tailored costumes. .Mr. and Mrs. Archer went over to Ardoch to visit friends this week. Miss Blanche Wehe of Lakota has been the guest of friends here this week. Mrs. Louis Robinson and children Bpent several days with relatives in Ardoch this week. Mrs. B. A. Ferris of Ardoch was the guest of Grand Forks friends Wednes day of last week. ft* The state convention of the W. C. T. U.. will occur in Park River from the 21st to the 25th of September. Mrs. Johnson and children were the guests of friends in the village of Arooch Tuesday of last week. Amethyst appears again among the new colors in dress materials. The tones are very beautiful and generally becoming. Mr. Turney W. and brother. Arthur Baird, arrived in Lakota Tuesday for a few weeks' visit with their parents, "Mr. and Mr~. T. J. Baird. •ft Mrs. E. C. Cooper is entertaining this afternoon in honor of her sister, Mrs. McHugh and her neice Miss Mc Hugh oi Oak Park, 111. Miss Lizzie Gorman, who has been visiting at the O'Laughlin home in Milton the past two weeks, returned to her home here on Monday. Ribbon. embroidery is seen mixed with the handsome laces that trim the advance models of costumes for dressy day and evening wear of the fall. •ft The separate waist of plaid is to be very fashionable this fall. It is the sea son when the world is growing brown and bare, and women want something blight. •ft Mrs. G. R. Jacobi spent several days In the village of Ardoch last week visiting among old friends and rela tives. Mrs. Jacobi is quite an auto en thusiast and made the trip without the aid of a chaffeur. The skirt with many gores always hangs better than the circular skirt and can be made as flaring as one likes about the feet. It will be more generally worn this winter. The hats for early fall wear are very, very small in many instances. This means that one will have to dress her hair loose and fluffy at the sides unless she has a very small face and head. •at Have you seen any of the corset cov ers that slip on over the head? The back is finished with a ribbon-run beading at the waist line, the ribbon ends being used to confine the loose fronts after the garment is on. The new shirtwaist suits for fall are exceedingly smart and trim in their lines, are often tailored and have the severe finish that tailored garments ought to have. For street and travel ing and business they are especially appropriate and will certainly find fa vor with American women. •ft Pleasant visitors at the Dakota to day are Mr. and Mrs. Grant Hager of St. Thomas and Mrs. Hager's sister and brother-in-law, Dr. and Mrs. G. A. Bading, who have been their guests at St. Thomas the past two weeks. They are now enroute to their home at Milwaukee, where the doctor is health commissioner of the city. •ft There has been a pretty style of shirtwaists this summer made with yoke that ran down to the belt in one with a narrow center panel, and now we are going to have this same de sign, in the natty silk shirtwaist suits. A very clever designer has gone a step further and joined the lower edge Invisibly with the shaped girdle. •ft When the sun refuses to shine and floods of trouble threaten, and the fu ture appears so dark and so forbidding, how like an angel does any mortal be come who will feel for the sufferer an tell him so. Never is a Christian more like Christ than when he shows senti ments of friendship toward those who have been wounded amid the vicissitu des of life—McCall's Magazine. The Valley City ladles having taken the initiative in the matter of civic Improvement, it has been suggested by one of the state papers that a conven tion of those interested in the work of beautifying and improving the ap pearance and sanitary .condition of the towns and cities of the state would be greatly aided by a state convention and a general discussion of the subject. Ladies take a great interest in such •reform work from many points of view, and seem well adapted to push the natter and force the attention of the •sr PAQ B, Society Editor. Offlce Phone*, Both No. 14. voters of the cities to the subject and to needed improvements of streets and city surroundings which the men too often neglect, or are too busy to at tend to—Jamestown Alert. Let Grand Forks ladies make the beginning and call a convention. The "Of Interest to Women" columns of the Grand Forks Evening Times are open for suggestions on the subject. Mrs. Sig Wolff entertained Friday afternoon complimentary to her sis ter, Mrs. Emil Hekerniann of New York, who has been her guest here for the past three months and who will soon return to her home. Thirty six ladies were in attendance and cards and a guessing game occupied their attention for the afternoon. At five hundred the prizes were awarded to Mrs. H. M. Wheeler and Mrs. Riley Bates. In the guessing contest the prize went to Mrs. Rhode. The home was effectively d^feorated for the oc casion 'n astors and sweet peas. Mrs. -vas assisted in the pleasure of ts by Mesdames Charles X. iRilev Bates, George Wilder ana t.»'adison. •ft Announcement comes this morning of a coming marriage that will be of great interest both here, jnd through out the state, where the voting people interested, and their families are well known and prominent. It is that of Miss Sarah Kern Bosard third daughter of Attorney and Mrs. James H. Bosard of this city to Mr. Raymond Alexander Jackson a prominent young business man here, formerly of St. Paul. The wedding will occur at six o'clock on the evening of September twelfth at the Presbyterian church in this city. It will be a fashionable affair attended by prominent people from all over the state. Miss Birdie Wolff will attend the bride as maid of honor. Miss Daphne Bosard, sister of the bride, Miss Mabel Jackson, sister of the groom, from St. Paul and Miss Francis Pace of Duluth will act as brides maids. Both young people are popular socially and well known in the state and have legions of friends who will extend the most cordial con gratulations. Another wedding an nouncement of interest is that of Miss Elenore Allert second daughter of Hon. and Mrs. H. D. Allert of Langdon who will wed the second week in September Mr. Fred Smith of that city. This will also be a very fashionable affair. STATE SOCIETY. When the Wife's Away. No one to kiss when a man goes home, No one to kiss when he leaves. No one to hold in his hungry arms. And none to console when he grieves And only a house all littered up, And only a tire and a light While his footfalls ring through the empty rooms That are chill with the air of night. And a man knows then how thin the veil 'Twixt him and the savage life. And he knows that the wall that separ ates Is the love of a gentle wife For his dainty home with its pictured walls. With its tapestries, rugs and lace, Js no more to him when his loved one's gone Than the heathen's abiding^ place. No one to kiss when a man goes home. No one to kiss when he leaves. No one to hold in his hungry arms. Or to say "Never mind" when he grieves. But only a house all littered up, And only a Are and a light. While his footfalls ring through the empty rooms That are weird with ghoulish night. —S. W. Gillilan. Mrs. M. M. Dodge, who has been in Rolla since the first of August solicit ing pupils for the Indian industrial school at Chilocco, Okla., expects to leave for that place on Saturday with 41 pupils. Twenty-eight of these were secured at Walhalla and the remainder at Rolla. These pupils are taken for three year terms and range in age from six to twenty-two years. Larlmore Society. Ther is a scarcity of servant girls here. Miss Edith Wilson has returned home from Lakota where she was em ployed in the telephone offlce. Miss Mabel Wilcox has returned home from Minot where she has been visiting for several weeks. Miss Mabelle Johnstone, of Grand Forks, has accepted a position as stenographer in the Great Northern office here. Mrs. May Pickett entertained the Presbyterian ladies aid society last Thursday afternoon. Delightful re freshments were served on the lawn and greatly enjoyed. Mrs. -W. L. Evers and Miss Helen Evers of Iowa Falls, Iowa, are visit ing with Mrs. Ernest E. Calkins. Mrs. Evers is the mother of Mrs. Calkins while Miss Evers is her sister. Mr. and Mrs. S**P. Whittaker and daughter of Orange Co., N. Y., are guests at the Jake Eastgate farm. •ft Miss Anna Fuller gave a luncheon Friday afternoon complimentary to her sister-in-law, Mrs. W. Emmet Fuller of Grand Forks. Mr. Wellington Irish, editor of The Wheatland Eagle, spent Sunday in the city as the guest of Hon. H. F. Arnold. Miss Lucile Arnold enter tained a few friends Saturday evening in his honor. Mr. and Mrs. Frank DeCamp, of Grand Forks, were guests at the home of Dr. and Mrs. A. P. Rounsevell over Sunday. •ft Dr. A. T. Rowe has arrived and will be a partner in the future with Dr. R. B. Webb. He left Saturday evening for a short visit with his father, Dr. H. J. Rowe, at Casselton. Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Jackson arrived in the city from Grand Forks last Thursday. They have rented the P. S. Berg residence. Mr. Jackson is the new superintendent of the city schools in place of Mr. Berg who re signed last spring. They will be an addition to social and literary circles. THE EVENING TIMES, GRAND FORKS, N. D. Mr. S. A. Johnson was called to Wal ker, Minn., last Saturday by a tele gram informing him of the serious illness of his son, Herbert. The young man has been sick for several months and had gone to live in the pines for the benefit of his health. His many friends hope for his speedy recovery. •ft The Minto Journal has the following to say of Dr. O'Keet'e who will shortly move to this city to make his home. Minto's loss will be Grand Forks gain. Dr. Henry O'Keefe has sold his practice in this city, also his resi- dence property, and in a short time will no longer be counted a resident of Minto. The deal was consumated last week and he is at once to turn over his practice—and his home—to his successor. For nearly a quarter of a century Mr. O'Keefe has been a resident of Minto. Coming here a young man shortly after graduating from McGill Medical college, he commenced his career as a practicing physician. In the early days when everything was fresh and active, he at once took his place in the front rank with the live active business men of the community. His practice was large. He was suc cessful and prosperous from the start. Shortly after establishing here he took unto himself a wife, and as he prospered in business he was also blessed with a steadily increasing family of bright boys and girls, and today Mr. O'Keefe and family are so much a part of Minto, in a business, social and intellectual way, that their departure will surely leave a particu larly noticeable gap, and while the citizens are wishing them all kinds of good fortune in the change they are making, it goes without saying that all are sorry to lose them. They go to Grand Forks where they will make their permanent residence. The doctor has purchased a fine resi dence on International avenue and the family will make their home there the first of the coming month. The doctor does not contemplate at once engaging in the practice of his pro fession in that city, but will do so a little later on. He will spend much of the time here in Minto this fall attend ing his extensive business interests. His successor at Minto will be Dr. Frank P. Norton. Dr. Norton is a young physician, a graduate of one of the leading western medical college^ and has had about three years experi ence. He comes here from Rochester., Minn., where for a year he has been connected with the famous Mayo Hos pital. He steps into good practice and will be cordially welcome)} by the peo ple of the community. Some August Weddings. Wednesday afternoon promptly at the hour of three in the Milton Lutheran church was solomnized the marriage of Miss Emelia Johnson and Mr. Hans Berg, both prominent young people of Milton. Rev. Langemo, of Edinburg, performed the ceremony in the presence of a host of friends of the couple. The bride was assisted by her sis ter, Miss Julia Johnson and Miss Hilda Bakken. Mr. Christ Berg, a brother of the groom, and Mr. Ted Taarud as sisted the groom. The wedding march was played by Mrs. Herseth. After the ceremony the numerous guests repaired to Mr. and Mrs. Berg's new home, where a bounteous wedding supper was served. In the evning a social hop was given in the parlors of the Northwestern ho tel in honor of the event, which was highly enjoyed by all the young people and continued until a late hour. At the home of the bride's parents in Blue Earth county, Minn., on Au gust 7th, 1906, Mr. Andrew Newgard of Petersburg, N. D„ and Miss Han nah Johnson. Mr. Newgard is a mem ber of the general merchandise firm of L. H. Peterson & Co. at Petersburg. They will go to housekeeping at once and occupy one of Hon. M. N. John son's cottages on the north side. At Cooperstown, N. D., Aug. 16th, 1906, by Rev. Oscar D. Purinton, Mrs. Emily Johnson to Mr. Frederick Theo dore Schlinss, both of Jessie, N. D., were, wedded. Mr. Conrad Ellison and Miss Smed hammer were united in marriage at the bride's home last Saturady evening at Litchville, N. D„ at 8 o'clock, Rev. Arevik officiating. The bride is the esteemed daughter of Mr. B. Smed hammer and the groom is a popular young farmer southeast of Litchville. One of'the prettiest of church wed dings of the season was solemnized at Hannaford, N. D., at high noon Wed nesday, Aug. 15, 1906, when Mr. Al fred Orlando Anderson led to the altar Miss Sara Jean Sinclair and by the Rev. O. D. "Purinton. were made' man and wife. The bride is the youngest daughter of Mrs. Daniel Sinclair is one of the fairest products of North Dakota, high ly accomplished, a fine musician, and well fitted in every respect to adorn the home in which she will be a bright light. She was beautifully dressed in a white silk mull made over white silk, inset with baby Irish lace with appli que lace yoke, her only ornament being a handsome bracelet, the gift of the groom. She carried a shower bouquet of white roses. The groom is the popular and effi cient cashier of the First National bank at Hannaford, who came there fcom Iowa a year and a half ago, and who, by his many sterling qualities, has won for himself a host of friends. The bride was attended by her sister as maid of honor, who was dressed in green silk mull, made with lace. The bridesmaids, Miss Fay Anderson, of Fargo, and Miss Mabel Mills, were dressed in white mull. The maids car ried sweet peas. They were preceded by two little flower girls, Florence and Elinor Sin clair nieces of the bride, who were daintily gowned in white and carried white sweet peas. The groom was attended by his cousin, Mr. Edward Savre and Messrs. W. C. Langdon and Andrew Anderson. A very pretty wedding took place Tuesday afternoon at the home of Mrs Hannah Kuhn in Park River, the con tracting parties being Mr. John M. Kuhn and Miss Emma Pence, both of Pana Illinois. Rev. D. M. Mcintosh was the officiating clergyman and the ceremony was performed under an archway decorated with the National flowers and flowers of the season. Mrs. "on®y sister of the groom, play ed Mendelssohn's wedding march, and sang "O, Promise Me." Only the im mediate relatives and friends of the family were present. The groom is a son of Mrs. Kuhn, of Park River, and is a prominent resi dent and business man of Pana having the management of the telephone busi ness of that city. The bride has been a guest of friends at Park River since Vr Of Interest to Women THREE RECIPES. Ices and Sherbets in Fruit Cups. A decorative way of serving ices and creams is inside fruit shells from which the interior has been scooped out. Oranges, lemons, grape fruit and pineapples lend themselves gracefully to this treatment. They are all pre pared in much the same way. Take for instance oranges. Cut in halves, remove the pulp, dry the inside, chill, and fill with the frozen mixture. Re place the top and serve immediately. fanteloupe Glace with Preserved Ginger. Canteloupes filled with ice cream are specially popular and delicious. Cut the melons in halves and chill. Serve each -half on a pretty plate, on a bed of cracked ice. The Canadians add to the cream a spoonful of pre served ginger or gingered pears. In deed the ginger almost invariably goes with canteloup,e even without the ice cream. American housewives fre quently pour over the vanilla cream served in a muskmelon cup, wine like Tokay or Muscatel or any cordial. Watermelon Oluce. Watermelon is served in several ways with ice cream. Sometimes the pulp is cut -in thick slices, then shaped pieces, and these hollowed out slightly and filled with ice cream. Again, where it is desired to send the whole ice to the table the melon is cut in halves lengthwise and one-half scooped out to make the hull of a boat. In this is placed a sherbet made of the pulp crushed, sweetened and flavored with sherry, then frozen or, again, with ice cream moulded in the form of small melons, one for each service and a little pyramid of melon to go with it. The way to get the little oval pieces of melon is simply to scoop out the pulp of a half melon, using a spoon and rotary motion. Quatrain. Who hath no need of pain To chasten and control, God pity him, for he must be Dwarfed and infirm of soul. C. L. Story, in Munsey's. 'Phone Girls' Trials. How to be healthy and happy is a problem which the telephone girl is trying to solve. Her work is very try ing. according to Dr. Wallbaum, of Berlin, who is quoted in the practition er. He has drawn up a formidable list of symptoms noted in telephone girls some of which may be classified as follows: 1. Symptoms of over-excitability, headache with giddiness, neuralgia of different kinds and muscular tremors. 2. Symptoms of exhaustion, paraly sis of the vocal chords and pains in the chest. 3. Heart troubles and irregularity of the pulse. Dr. Wallbaum attributes these to the frequent passage of the electric cur rent to which the girls are exposed. "It is undoubtedly true that tele phone girls suffer from ills unknown to other callings," declared a well known nerve specialist to a reporter. "But I do not believe they are to any great extent due to electric currents. I attribute the majority to the concen tration which the work demands and the confined conditions they sometimes work under." Girls Whv Marry Young." The girl who marries when she is June and has made many warm friends by her pleasing personality. The out of town guests were Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Mautz, of Mayville Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Honey, Edmore and Mr. E. G. Arnot of Fairdale. Sunday evening, August 19, at the home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thos. Thompson, twelve miles west of Park River occurred the mar riage of Mr. K. E. Westerlund and Miss Emma Thompson, the Rev. Mr. Oker lund, of Edinburg, oJjBciating. Mr. and Mrs. Westerlund will leave the first of the week for Charlson, N. D., where the gropm has a claim and where they will have their future home. Mr. J. G..Johnson of Milton, N. D., and Miss Florence Pierce, of Verona, Wis., were joined in wedlock at Madi son. Tuesday of this week. The bride is well known at Milton, having taught the intermediate department in the schools for, several years. The young couple will set up housekeeping in the rcoms over the State bank recently vacted by Dr. Esler. $ THIS DATE IX HISTORY." August 25. S 1270—Louis IX. of France died. Born April 25, 1215. 1482—Margaret of Anjou, Queen of Henry VI. of England, died. 1770—Thomas Chatterton, English poet, died. 1776—David Hume, Scotch histor ian, died. Born Aprial 26, 1711. 1789—Mary Washington, mother of George Washington, died. 1807—Edward Preble, American commodore, died. 1814—Washington, D. C. evacuated by the British. 1830—Insurrection of Belgians com menced at Brussels. 1854—Japanese announced new policy of commercial intercourse. 1862—James Appleton, father of prohibition, died. Born Feb. 14, 1786. 1897—President Borda of Uruguay assassinated. "THIS IS JHY 62 BIRTHDAY" S General Okm 8 General Baron Oku, who recently was appointed chief of the general staff of the Japanese army, was born August. 25, 1844. He won bis title of baron for distinguished services in the war against China, twelve years ago. After receiving a collegiate education he entered the army when 27 years of of age. In 1877, while, a major, he was placed in command of the emperor's forces in Kamamoto Castle, in south ern Japan, during the Satpuma rebell ion. After being nearly starved he led a desperate sortio, cut his way through the rebels and Joined the re lieving forces. For this act he was promoted and decorated. At the out break of the war with Riissla Oku was given command of one of the four great armies hurled into Manchuria. Before the arrival of Oyama and Kodama, operating alone, Oku won a but 17 or 18 has not had time to get to know thoroughly all that is included in good education. Is it any wonder that when she enters on her new life, with its thousand and one fresh pleas ures, duties and distractions, she should cease to take much interest in the work of her school days? Unless she is a really intellectual woman, she, as a rule, drops out of all the literary and artistic pursuits of her girlhood and becomeB absorbed in domesticity, or in a round of amusements to the greater detriment of her mental vigor, says Woman's Life. Girls who marry very young, for this reason, run a great risk of becoming very uninteresting in middle age, more especially if the in come on which they marry is a nar row one, entailing a home life limited by lacJr of means and leisure to travel, to read and to cultivate their minds, and necessitating close attention to the supervision of the household. She's Only a Working Girl. The above came laughingly from the lips of one of Hillsboro's most beauti ful and aristocratic women in explana tion of a snub administered to a lady whom she was pleased to designate as "only a working girl." Yes, she was only a working girl, but she is also a lady, both by birth and breeding, and every way the lady's equal in refine ment and courtesy. It makes our blood boll to hear such statements, as that. Is not the girl who serves you, whether at hotel, restaurant or store, entitled to the courtesies of every day life? Is she to be treated as if she were so far your inferior that you would be lower ing yourself to extend to her the courtesies you would give an utter stranger? Only a working girl—yes, and what would the world do if it were not for the working girl? She is a factor in the world of today, where she fills her place well and earns ev ery cent of the money paid her. No matter if she work in kitchen, store, office or dining room, she is a woman and she is earning a living for her self and the snobs who make slighting remarks or hurt her feelings with their own snobbery, should be eliminated from the best class of society. Give the working girl her due, give her the courtesy which her position demands for you at her hands. She would give It to you were you in her place, and among any class of women you will find none so warm-hearted and ready to please as the so-called working girl. She gives you good service, give her courtesy she is pleasant and tries to please you, give her pleasant words of thanks and a smile and win for yourself what is worth more than you perhaps think— the respect and regard of that self same working girl. It costs you nothing and it is her due— give it to her and be what nature Intended you to be—a true woman, not the snob which those remarks and little cuts make you. Just place yourself in her place and estimate what you would like to receive at the hands of her and her fellows if they were in yours. Estimate it by what you expect of her, and see if there would not be a great deal in your estimation which you do not Include In your treatment of her. Thank God that the women who walk over the wage-earning girls are comparatively few, for it is hard to believe that the American woman, who is commonly agreed to be the acme of all that is noblest and best in modern womanhood, is becoming' that most despicable of all classes—a snob.— Hillsboro Blade. series of Brilliant victories, begin ning with the bloody battle of Nan Shan, steadily beating Sackemberg back for 250 miles, until joined by the other three armies. He never lost a fight "SUNDAY IN HISTORY" August 26. $ 1278—Battle of Marchfeld, which laid ithe foundation of 'the House Hapsburg. 1762—Valencia do Alcantara, in Spain, taken by a British force under Burgoyne. 1765—Riot In Boston caused by the Stamp Act. 1795—British squadron under Nel son captured 11 French vessels In bay of Alaese. 1813—Prussians and Russians de feated the French at Battle of Katz bach, in Silesia. 1836—Buffalo and Niagara Railroad opened. 1849—Faustin Soulouque crowned emperor of Hayti under title or Faus tin I. 1859—First oil well found in United States. 1862—Union naval expedition pro ceeded up the Yazoo river, in Missis sippi. 1894—Anti-Lords demonstration/ in Hyde Park, London. 1904—Jefferles defeated Monroe in 1 round in fight for puglistic champ ionship. ••••£••«.$$. $ 4 1 & "SUNDAY MY 64TH BORTHDAY" S Gen. John C. Bates. General John C. Bates, chief of staff of the United States army, was born in a country town in Missouri on Aug. 26. 1842. When he was 19 yefrs old he was given a commission in the Eleventh infantry, a regiment of regu lars In which he served during all the years of tne Civil war. For faith ful and meritorious services in the field in tha early days of the conflict Lieut. Bates was brevetted major, an honorary title that he held prior to his regular promotion to a captaincy. For thirty years after the close of the war he served at stations west of the. Mis sislppl, and when tHe Spanish-war broke out he was made a major-gen eral of volunteers. After going to the Philippines in 1899 .he conducted cam paigns In various parts of the island and directed the negotiations by which the vSultan of Sulu acknowledged the domination of the United States. Early In the present year General Bates succeeded Gen. Chaffee as chief of staff and soon- thereafter was retired for age. WILL MUZZLF DOGS. Granville City Council Takes Decisive Action. Granville, N. D., Aug. 25.—-The city council has issued an order to muzzle all dogs running around loose, as a result of-one dog running about the streets biting other dogs. -The order ord to muzzle dogs holds for ten days. v' .• 'O l?"¥ A Will vlBlt professionally East Grand Forks at Great Northern Hotel, Wed nesday, August 22. ONE DAY ONLY.- Retaralag Every Fear Weeks. Or. Rea has had 15 years of actoal experience In the treatment and cure of all curable medical and surgical diseases of the' Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat, Lung Diseases, Early Con sumption, Bronchitis, Bronchial Ca tarrh, Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, Stomach and Bowel Troubles, Appen dicitis, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sola tia, Bright's disease, Diabetes, Kidney, Liver, Bladder Troubles, Prostatic and Female Diseases, Dizziness, Nervous ness, Indigestion, Obesity, Interrupted Nutrition, Slow Growth in children, and all wasting, diseases in adults. Many cases of Deafness, Ringing in the Ears, Loss of Eyesight, Cataract, Cross Eyes, etc., that have been im properly treated can easily be restor ed. Deformities, Club Feet, Curvature of the Spine, Disease of the Brain, Par alysisi* Heart Disease, Dropsy, Swell ing of the Limbs, Stricture, Open Sores, Pain In the Bones, Granular Enla-gements, and all long standing diseases properly treated. Faillna memory, lack of energy, impoverished blood, pimples, Impediments to mar riage, blood and skin diseases, Erup tions, Hair Falling, Swellings, Sore Throat, Ulcers, Weak Back, Burning Urine, passing urine too often, Stric ture, etc., receive searching treatment medicine, and as adopted by America's most eminent specialist. tuepom jo euii am uj paauaiaodxa SB Cancers, Tumors, Goitre, Fistula, PileB, Varococele, Rupture and enlarg ed glands treated successfully -with the hypodermic injection method. Thla is really one of the most scientific and surely effective plans of the 20th century. Consultation and examina tion to those Interested, $1.00. DR. REA Minneapolis. Matting to the value of $2,543,498 was exported from Japan last year 90 per cent of it went to the United States. 0 to 18 N. W. B. DIXON. rf, A. Educated -in the Best Hospitals to Europe-aad America. DR. REA SPECIALIST. Eye. Ear, Nose, Tknth mmmI, Lnti Diseases of Mea, Diseases of Womea. 1\ G. 6. Bacon & Van Alstine Livery and Hack Stable FOURTH ST. TELEPHONE 131 Grand Forks* North Dakota The Right Road TO CHICAGO, KANSAS CITY AND OMAHA FROM SAINT PAUL OR MINNEAPOLIS WESTERN fBBUHir Many trains daily, superbly equipped, making last time. Through Tourist Cars to California, with choice of rputes west of Omaha or Kansas City. For information write to JOKES, TraOtling Agmt, Fargo, North Vakota Pack Your Trunk And Go East That's a good start toward a pleasant and pro Stable Summer Vacsftion. In purchasing your ticket tell the agent that it MUST read over the Chicago, Milwaukee & St.Paul Railway between the Twin Cities and Chicago. Five handsome dally trains including the Pioneer Limited and the Fast Mail. Dtrest connections at St Paul Union Depot with all trains from the north and west. Sleeping car berths higher, wider and ibnger than the berths in other sleepers and therefore- cooler and more com fortable for summer travel. Let us know where you are going and full inrormatlon as to rates, routes, connections, etc.. will be cheerfully furnished by return m»ii. I*. W. P. A.. Sl. Paul, M«„., 360 BOBERT STREET JH SATURDAY' AUGUST 25,1906. VP We would like to sell you your COAL this year. Now is die time to put it in—before die FALL RUSH FUEL 60, TtiekoteNitnlxrllO The M. H. Redlck HIDE & FUR CO. Northwestern Dealers In Fiu Northern Furs, Hidea, Pelta, Wool. Tallow, Roota Etc. Largest and Oldest Hide and Fur House in the State. GRAND FORKS N. DAK. DAKOTA BOTTLING WORKS Importer*. Manofsetonn and JMmuet Carboaated hcvirajeii Phosphates, Fountain Syrnpa and all Kind* of Flavor* Siders, Halts and Seltzer Waters H. W. nest 10S9-L Tri-State lfes* 818 Graad Fork*, No. Oak. Guarantee Stock Food Company la corporate Capital Stock. $00,000 Manufaoturera ot 8took Food, Pout ed? and White Liniment •RAMP IQMta. K. P. Rasmnssen, Bemis & Company Dry Goods. Notloaa. Etc. 6IAXD TOMS R. DAKOTA O. YOUNG Whalcaalt Pan! tar* HUMS, Carytij, SawiaJ Mickiaaa, Beak aad Ofitci Faraitar* lM-UT-UB Nltt TMrd St. Graad Forks, North Dakota