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OkVf "i tv FRIDAY, MARCH 8,1907. if tHThm-r? CUBS' TRAINING TRIP. March 8—Leave West Baden for south. March 10-17-^New Orleans. March 18-19—Mobile, Ala. March 20-22—Birmingham, Ala. March 23-24—Memphis, Tenn. Mlarch 2B-27—Nashville. Tenn. March 28-29—Louisville. Ky. March 31-Aprll 2—Columbus, O. April 3-4—Springfield, O. April 5-6—Indianapolis, Ind. April 7—Dayton, O. April 8-8—First team, Champaign, 111. April 8-9—Second team, Toledo, O. April 11—Open National League sea son at Chicago. Grand Forks and Fargo. "It tiie overtures of the Grand Porks and Fargo baseball fans are favorably received, it is likely that the league will comprise six clubs, instead of four, as now planned. Alexander Stearns and other prominent baseball fans of 'Fargo, who have plenty of money be hind them, are not going to let Fargo be left out of the league without a show of resistance. Grand Forks is also said to be anxious to get a team back in the old company and it is more than possible that the sixth team will come from there. Superior has been mentioned as a possible member of the league and because of its nearness to Dulnth would probably make a good drawing card. A point brought out very strongly at the league's annual meeting was the salary limit. It is proposed to live up to the agreement on this point to the letter this season and any team found violating the rule will be liable to a heavy fine. Another factor which will have, much to do with the strengthen ing of the league and prohibit the dropping of any team without great financial loss is a $1,000 forfeit Each teaan will be required to put up a $1,000 forfeit that it will play out the entire schedule. Lake Linden Lid Lost. All of Calumet's Sunday games, so far as the present arrangements go, will be played at the baseball park 'in Lake Linden. This will be some rec ompense to that town for the dropping of its club from the league. It is ex pected that the schedule committee will meet In Duluth in three or four weeks to prepare the schedule for the conning summer. By that time it should be kaown whether the league will com prise four or six teams." MEMSIC AND NEARY MATCHED. Milwaukee, Wis., March 8.—George Meniere and Charley Neary will again test conclusions In the roped arena, haiving agreed to fight ten rounds as the star attraction of a biff show to be given toy the Milwaukee Athletic club tonight In a battle before the Pacific Athletic club at Los Angeles Memsic sent Neary to the floor for the couut in the second round of what was to have been a ten-round bout. Neary declares that it was an accident and that he intends to clearly demonstrate his superiority over Memsic in the bat tle this'evening. DETROIT BOXING SHOW. Detroit, Mich., March 8.—Six-round, bouts between Kid Brook and Willie Spracklin, and Harry Cobb and Joe Cherry, are the principal features of a fight card arranged for tonight at the Light Guard armory. Several minor matches have also been made for the event. The police and city officials have promised not to interfere with the show upon the written agreement of the managers not to offer any money to the contestants. SHOEL AND WEEKS TO FIGHT. Denver,!, Colo., March 8.—Muggsy Shoel of Cheyenne, Wyo., and Freddie Weeks of Cripple Creek will fight ten rounds before the Denver Eagles at Bast Turner hall this evening. The men will weigh in at 122 pounds at 3 o'clock this afternoon and will fight for half of the gate money, the receipts to be split on the basis of sixty per cent to the winner and forty per cent to the loser. Both fighters have post ed a $500 forfeit to go as aside bet. New York police want the eight-hour day. Several hundred of them held meetings recently and decided to or ganize all the men on the force and then make a stand for the three platoon system. im 1 IS Duluth and Copper Countiry Papers Don't Like the Four Club Circuit. That the Duluth and Copper Country papers don't like the idea of a four club Northern-Copper Country league can be gleaned from a glance down the sporting columns. Several of the pa pers openly admit that the fans want a change of players once in a while, at least more than a four-club league will admit of. Grand Forks and Fargo are the two towns wanted to complete the circuity and from the "dope" handed out by some of the sporting scribes one would* be led to ibelleve that these two cities have already taken the mat ter up and are knocking at the door for admittance. A dispatch from Calumet has the fol lowing to say with reference to the present status, so far as the copper country fans are led to believe: CUBS' TRAINING ROSTER. Pitchers. Inflelden C. W. Harper Manager P. Chance SSLSTSL, 8fteM« E. M. Reulbach 3oBeph Tlnker J. Pfelster John Evfrs C. L. Lundgren Bill Sweeney Hull Purdue Outfielders Blaine Durbin J. P. Slagle J. W. Taylor H. Gessler Catchers Jim Sheckard Mike Kahoe W. Osborne John Kling Prank Schulte J. W. Seabaugh N. J. Randall Pat Moran Arthur Hoffman CUBS DUE Off 01 UIML IP 10 Left Chicago Today —Have Been Taking the Water Cure at West Baden. Chicago, March 8.—'Manager Frank Chance's Cubs, champions of the Na tional league, who have been taking the water cure at West Baden springs for the last week, left today for the south. Only mild preliminary work has been indulged in. at the springs and the strenuous work of the train ing season will not begin until the squad goes into camp at New Orleans on Sunday. Five exhibition games will be played in the Crescent City with Charley Frank's Pelicans of the Southern league, three games with the strong Birmingham team and two games with the Mobile nine of the Cotton States league. The Cubs will also show at Memphis and Nashville, and at Louis ville will commence an invasion of the American association territory. With the exception of three days at the wind-up of the training season the entire bunch will be kept intact and there will be no division of forces for the sake of the sheckels to be picked up by "showing" in the smaller towns. The hardest games of the tour are ex pected to be those arranged with the University of Illinois team, to be played at Champaign just before the opening of the National league season. Only six youngsters are being taken on the southern trip, two of them, Dur bin and Purdue, being pitchers who have made great reputations in minor leagues. It is almost a certainty, how ever, that when the umpire yells "Play ball on April 11 the Cubs line-up will be the same as it was when the season last year came to a close. Manager Chance is firm in the belief that his veterans can put it over any team in the National league .as easily as they did last season, despite their trouncing toy the White Sox in the world's cham pionship series, and will not be likely to make any changes unless some of his discoveries prove to be extraordi narily good players. Periiaps the only change possibly to be made in the line-up is the substitu tion of Hofman for Jim Slagle in cen ter field. Slagle held down that posi tion last year, hut was injured early in the world's series and Art Hofman was substituted. He was easily the star of the Cubs' team in that famous series, covering center field perfectly and making a remarkable record with the willow. Hofman is one of the best all around utility players in the league, however, and it is not probable that Chance will not care to lose his serv ices as a substitute on infield positions by giving him a regular position in the outer garden. John Kling will continue as the star man behind the plate and has few su periors as a catcher in the baseball 'world. Mordecai Brown, the three fingered twirler. who was the bright particular star among National league pitchers last year, is in good condition and is expected to continue his phe nomenal work during the coming year. Manager Frank Chance will again hold down the initial bag, John Bvers will again play second, Harry Steinfeldt will occupy third and Joe Tinker will play short. Jim Sheckard and Frank Schulte are certain to retain their places in the outfield. Unsettled Stairway. In a recent suit in a Cincinnati couit a lawyer was cross-examining a Ger man, the point under inquiry being the relative position of the doors, windows and so forth in a house in which a cer tain transaction was alleged to have occurred. "And now, my good man, said the lawyer, "will you ,be good enough to tell the court bow the stairs run in your house?" The German looked dazed for a mo ment. "How do they run?" he re peated. "Yes, how do the stairs run?" "Veil," continued the witness, "ven I am oopstairs dey run down, and ven I am downstairs dey run oop." Times wants will supply your wants Cut FLOWERS For All Occasions. Fasersl Decfyu •all la a Neat aid Artistic Mssatfta Short Notice. Telcphose S28. 10 Sosth 3f 1 St. Frank V. Kent & Co. IVLHIFLCT SEM FOR Big Demand For Labor Will Result in Increased Wages For Section Men. The Indications are that the rail roads entering Grand Forks, as well as those over the entire northwest, will have to pay a higher scale of wages to the section hands this year than ever before. As a rule, the section man is the most poorly paid employe along ,the line, and generally his*work is enough easier than that of men in the extra gangs to warrant the lower scale. The coming summer there will prob ably he an increase in the wages of both section and extra gang members. Last season some of the roads were compelled to pay more for section hands than had been the case for a number of years, and it went very much against the grain. The increase was not forthcoming until a shortage of men made it absolutely essential that It must be granted. There was so much railroad work through the northwest, ii the line of construction, that the labor market was short all summer and fall, as It has .been prac tically all winter, and the railroads and contractors had to bid against each other to get any workmen at all. This year will be but a repetition of the season of 1906, only the chances are that the shortage of labor will be even more pronounced, and the neces sity for paying higher wages all the greater. Possibly the labor shortage through the northwest will have be come so widely advertised in the east before spring opens in earnest that enough new men will come into the territory to relieve the situation some what. This is hardly likely, however, for the same scarcity of men exists all through the southwest, particularly in San Francisco, where common labor is at a premium. Most of the workmen starting out from the east head for San Francisco, attracted by offers of. high wages there, and pass the north west up entirely. Much Building. There will be a vast amount of rail road building this year all the way from the Great Lakes to the Pacific coast, and an army of laborers will be needed to supply the demand for work men. Good wages will be offered, much higher than the section hands are re ceiving at present, and the difference in the scale will probably be sufficient to draw a good many section hands from this line of work to the more profitable field, unless a substantial raise is forthcoming on the part of the railroads. All winter, as is customary, the sec tion crews have been only a fraction of the size they are in summer, because the frozen roadbed prevents much work being done, but with the ap proach of spring, it will become neces sary to place full crews at work all along the line. In The Labor World It Is said that more convict-made goods are produced in Missouri than in any other state. The Flour and Cereal Mill Employes are to hold their national convention shortly at Belleville, 111. The new state of Oklahoma has adopted what is known as the standard child labor law, which is similar to the laws in force in several of the eastern states. Several of the large national and in ternational labor bodies have decided to hold their conventions at Norfolk thiB summer during the Jamestown Ex position. Carpenters, plumbers, painters, lath ers, plasterers, electricians, building laborers and sheet metal workers in Tacoma have recently commenced an enforcement of the "card rule." A labor union at San Francisco com posed largely of former soldiers has passed resolutions strongly favoring the restoration of the army canteen "in the interest of men, not theories." A woman's union for the protection of the labor unions of men has been organized in Jersey City. To establish a school to instruct women how and where to spend their money most bene ficially for union labor will be one of the features of the organization. The machinists of Providence, R. I., have voted to demand a nine-hour day and an .increase of 10 per cent in pay, to take effect on June 3 of the present year. A schedule of ten hours a day is now In force among the machinists and the pay ranges from $2 to $3.25 a day. The Ohio State Federation of Labor complains that the state authorities are not enforcing the Wertz law* re-* stricting the employment of convicts in competition with free labor. The officers of the federation are pressing the matter and Intend to take it to the courts. The workers in the oil fields about Beaumont, Tex., are planning to reor ganize the Oil and Gas Workers' union. It is understood that the action is pre liminary to a demand which the oil field workers will make for an increase of wages. The men are now receiving $3 a day. All arrangements have been com pleted between officers of the Interna tional Association of Machinists and those of the International Association of Allied Metal Mechanics for consoli dating the two organizations under the name of the former. The merger will become effective October 31. Approximately seven out of every eight children reported last year as mine and quarry workers were em- TXME8, GRAND FORKS, Mwdlwwti uln this »«.•'•ajg iMgUta tea thaa llcnti. wien. BtlinnNH. HELP WANTED WANTED—A GIRL FOR GENERAL housework. Call at 619 North Seventh street WANTED—GIRLS TO WORK NIGHTS Great Northern Cafe. WANTED—GOOD GIRL WANTED AT 121 North Sixth. WANTED—WE HAVE AN EXPER1 Automobile repairman on the road. If In need of any work, drop us a card and he will call on you. Bot tineau Automobile company, Bot tineau, N. D. WANTED—COMPETENT GIRLS FOR general housework none other need apply. Wares $• per week, to go to Lakota—private family. German or Swede preferred. Inquire at 802 South Fourth street In the morning. AGENTS WANTED—LADY OR GEN tlemen to canvas la city—full or part time—salary or commission. Apply at 21 South Fourth street. WANTED—YOUNG HEN TO SOLICIT for dally paper. Apply at Times of fice of R. V. Simmons. WANTED—RAILWAY MAIL yearly. Examination soon. Preparation free. Franklin Institute, Rocnester, N. Y. CORPORATION OWNING AND OP peratlng Industrial railway and min ing enterprises, desires representa tives on a high remunerative basis. Box 2416, Boston. SITUATIONS WANTED ANY ONE WISHING FIRST-CLASS dessmaklng done by the day, call at 716 North Fourth street N. W. phone 10HL—Mrs. B, H. Bennett WANTED—SCRUBBING AND WASH Ing done at offices and private houses by Mrs. Boobes. Phone 821 N. W. WANTED—WORK TO DO EVE nngs by amateur stengrapher. Call "B." Times. POSITION WANTED BY YOUNG MAN capable of buying for, and managing clothing and shoe dept. Inquire of "E." Times Office. ROOMS TO LET FOR RENT—FURNISHED ROOM with or without board. Inquire at 420 South Fourth street. FOR RENT—GOOD STORE BUILDING ami six room house. For particulars call 723 Second Ave. ROOMS FOR RENT—DOWNSTAIRS Also furnished rooms for ll*ht house keeping. Apply. 501 Cottonwood. TO RENT—NIC EL FURNISHED modern upstairs front room with steam heat, gas and bath. One or two ladies who will care for room themselves preferred. Apply 216 North Seventh street. FOR RENT—SIX-ROOM HOUSE. MOD ern. Seven-room house, waiter and sewer. Apply B01 Cottonwood. FOR RENT—FOUR ROOMS FURNISH ed suitable fo rlight housekeeping. Inquire 728 Second Ave. FOR RENT FURNISHED ROOMS Modern conveniences with or with out board Inquire at .400 North Sixth Street IOE FOR MAPLE LAKE OR RIVER ICE Phone Vie Chaffee, 110 or 689M Times wants will supply your wants Times Want Ads get results. Times Want Ada get results. ployed as coal miners. The occupation of the textile worker or the needle trades furnished employment to 35,070 children between 10 and 15 years of age, of which 5,136 were boys and 29, 934 were girls. One of the most sweeping labor de cisions ever rendered in Massachusetts was that recently handed down by Judge Gasklll of the superior court. He holds that a labor union has aright to fine any member who does not ac cede to the demand of the union and quit work in an establishment where a strike is in progress. "THIS DATTE IN HISTORY." March 8. 1702—King William III died and Queen Anne came to the throne of Eng land. 1765—The stamp act passed by the British house of lords. 1801—British defeated the French at 'battle of Aboukir, Egypt. 1814—Lord Wellington defeated the French and entered sBordeaux. 1822—President Monroe recommend ed recognition of independence of Mex ico and the South American states. 1844—Bernadotte, King of Sweden, died. 1855—First steam fire engine exhib ited in Baltimore. 1859—Aaron V. Brown of Tennes see became postmaster general of the United States. 1871—Treaty of Washington between the United States and England. i874—Millard Fillmore, thirteenth president of the United States, died. Born Jan. 7, 1800. 1895—Harry Hayward convicted in Minneapolis of the murder of Cather ine Ging. 1900—Theatre Francais in Paris de stroyed by fire. 1906—American troops killed 600 Moros in battle near Jolo. "THIS IS MY 40TH BIRTHDAY." Homer C. Davenport. Homer C. Davenport, whose political cartoons have made his name familiar to many nawspaper readers through out the country, was born In Silverton, Ore., March 8, 1867. His boyhood was spent on an Oregon farm and the only education he received was that afford ed by the humble district school of the neighborhood. Tiring of life on the farm he left It to seek a wider field for his ambitions and activities. For sev eral years he engaged in various pur suits, being in turn a horse jockey, a fireman on a railroad and a clown in a circus. But no matter what work he was engaged in he devoted many of his leisure moments to drawing "fun ny" pictures. His first work as a car toon artist was given him by a San Francisco paper In 1892. His work at tracted attention from the start, and li'arJuA^titiusi *CJ„„A^Y K. D. '"«v&5v A-t emm a Uu tw each laaertlam. Awll amafur wrt tnra «»el mwut MMfe .Bee hefare a relMk p. n, FOR SALE FOR SALE—NEWSPAPER PLANT IN town of 600. Doing good business nearest paper 20 miles wish to sell at once. A snap. Care of Times. FOR SALE—FIVE-FOOT ROLL TOP desk (almost new). H. W. Green wood. P. O. Box 103. FOR SALE—ONE 176.00 BROYS lfe horsepower gasoline engine motion shooting gallery and cylinder plana. Inquire at 614 DeMers avenue. FOR SALE—BRAND NEW OLIVER typewriter cheap. Inquire at the Times office or Phone 1046 M. WANTED—EVERYBODY TO LIST their property with Grand Forks Realty Co. Quick sales. FOR SALE—$750 BUYS A THREE room house and corner lot—house sd most new—good brick foundation. Phone SOL. Trl-State. FOR SALE—TWO GOOD DELIVERY Horses, Coffee Mill and Grocery Scales on reasonable terms. Apply Benner, Begg A Garvin. FOR 8ALE—FOR SALE OR TRADE Stoves, Household Goods, etc., Grand Forks Furniture Co., 208 South Third street Phones 680. FOR SALE—A FEW COUNTRY Livery Horses for sale cheap at the Bacon and Van Alsttne stable. FOR SALE—LOTS $26 TO 83,000. W. H. Kelsey, 20 North Fourth street MISCELLANEOUS WANTED TO RENT A MODERN SIX to eight room house for April 1, family of two. Inquire N. W. Tele phone 381. WANTED—TO EXCHANGE FARM lands and good real estate mortgages drawing 7 per cent Interest for stock of general mds, hardware, drugs or Imple ments. Inquire "B" Times office. WANTED—ROOMS TO CLEAN, WASH and Ironing to do, will go out Mrs. Fanny Paddon, 420 Brooklin Boul., East Grand Forks. WANTED—TO BUY FOR SPOT CASH one or two houses, 6 or 7 rooms, must be a snap or will not be con sldered, inquire "E" Times office. WANTED—A BUYER FOR A SELF feeding Garland coal stove. Apply evenings at 304-Chestnut street. WANTED—HOTEL MEN TO WRITE for sample and price on our special Hotel Blend Coffee. This snould benefit you. Home Tea Co., roasters, Grand Forks, N. D. WANTED—GENTLEMEN TO TAKE Turkish baths at Dudley's Palace barber shop. Always open. WANTED—GRAND FORKS PEOPLE to patronise this department, which Is to be a permanent feature of the Evening Times. WANTED—NEW CUSTOMERS AT the New Meat Market 116 North Third street, across from Times Of fice. WANTED—TO FURNISH ESTIMATES on all kinds of building, Dlnnle Bros, office, 314 International avenue. STORAGE STORAGE—WE STORE EVRYTHING good care. Panovits, Corliss block. LOST AND FOUND. LOST—A GOLD WATCH WITH NAME engraved on inside. Finder please return to Mrs. vDeWeese, ladings block. FOUND—ONE LADY'S CAPE IN Jeff's transfer hack. Owner can have same by calling at their office. PROPOSALS, For building any or all wooden orldges to be built by the County of Grand Porks, N. D., during the year, 1907. Sealed proposals will be received at (he office of the county auditor in the Court house at Grand Porks, N. D., until 10 o'clock a. m. Tuesday March 12 1907, for the construction of any or all wooden bridges to be built by the oounty during the year 1907. Accord ing to plans and specifications now on file in the office of the county auditor. Bids must be made by the Mneal foot tor truss and plain bridges. The county will furnish the pile driver for the use of the contractor if desired, a certified check or satisfactory bond In the sum of $100.00 must accompany each bid tor entrance into contract If awarded. The Board of Oounty commissioners reserve the right to reject any or all bids. Dated at Grand Forks, N. D., this 9th lay of February, 1907. HANS ANDERSON, County Auditor, Grand Forks, County, State of North Dakota. PROPOSALS. For building any or all steel bridges go be built by the County of Grand ftn-ks, N. D.. during the year, 1907. Sealed proposals will be received at the office of the county auditor in the Court house at Grand Forks, N. D., un til 10 o'clock a. m., Tuesday, March 12th 1907, for the construction of any or all steel bridges to be built by the oounty during the year, 1907. Ac cording to plans and specifications aow on file in the office of the county auditor, bids must be made by the lin eal foot A certified check or satis factory bond In the sum of $200.00 must accompany each bid for entrance into contract If awarded. The Board of County commissioners resrve the right to reject any or all bids. Dated at Grand Frks, N. D., this 9th lay of February, A. D., 1907. HANS ANDERSON, County Auditor, Grand Porks, County, State of North Dakota. three years later Mr. Davenport locat ed in New York and began drawing the political cartoons which won him no little fame. Nothing makes a man so happy as to collect a bad debt or secure an increase of his pension. MANUFACTURERS. H. E. ARMANN Heating and Ventilating Engineer Designing of economical heating and ventilating apparatus. Ventilation means health, vigor and life. Phone N. W. 1118, Trl-State 614L. Office Third Fleer St Jeha Bleek. PHYSICIANS & SURGEONS. Dr. H. O'Keefe Dr. F. J. Duggan CLASSIFIED ADS CLASSIFIED ADS OFFICE UNION NATIONAL BANK Building. Both phones 370. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Spe cial attention given to diseases of women. Office, Beare Block. Office hours, 10 a. m. to 12 m., 2 p. m. to 4 p. m., 7 p. m. to 8 p. m. Both phones 90-L. John Fawcett M. A., M. D. DISEASES OF WOM en and General Surgeon. Office over Stanchfield Store. Phone 261. Dr. J. Grassick OFFICE NORTHWESTERN BUILD ing, corner DeMers Avenue and Fourth St DENTISTS Dr. Eckman DENTIST. BOTH PHONES 466-M. Grand Forks, North Dakota. Drs. Fletcher & Saunderson DENTIST. CLIFFORD ANNEX, Grand Forks, N. D. Successors to Dr. Robert S. Ramsey. Dr. E. F. Adams DENTIST. OFFICE OVER UNION National Bank. Phone 191. ATTORNEYS AT LAW Geo. A. Bangs ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office, ground floor Clifford building. Both tele phones 64. Bardi G. Skulason ATTORNEY AT LAW. CLIFFORD Building, Second Floor. Both Phones 358. Grand Porks, N. D. S. G. Skulason ATTORNEY AT LAW. ST. JOHN'S Block, Third Floor. N. W. Phone 815L. Trl-State 815. W. A. Galder ATTORNEY AT LAW. ST. JOHN'S Block, Second Floor Front Trl State 259M. INSURANCE Holmes & Liedman FIRE, TORNADO AND PLATE Glass Insurance, Rents, Real Estate and Surety Bonds. Clifford block, Grand Porks, N. D. J. P. Read MUTUAL FIRE AND TORNADO Insurance. Rooms 5 and 6, Clifford Annex. Phone 735L. Grand Forks, N. D. ARCHITECTS! J. W. Ross ARCHITECT AND SUPERINTEND ent of Construction. Office 1 Third Street, Grand Porks, N. D. R. Smith ARCHITECT. BOTH PHONES. National Bank Building. W. J. Edwards ARCHITECT. NORTHWESTERN Building, Grand Porks. Northwest ern Phone 466L. OSTEOPATHY Dr. Orr Sanders Dr. Hay E. Sanders CHRONIC AND ACUTE DISEASES Successfully Treated. Treatment at home if desired. Suite 56, Security Block. Both Phones 542. Grand Forks, North Dakota. O'Reilly Bakery (E. O'Reilly, Propr.) Full line of baked goods always on hand. 618 International avenue. Both phones 359. DON MCDONALD TENTS, AWNINGS, SHADES Waterproof Covers for Harvesters Threshers and Grate Stacks Corner DeMers and Fifth Grand Forks, North Dakota TAILORS. latest Style* ea Hssd feriect Flts^GssrsstMi Paulson Bros. Merchant Tailors 118 Sostb Third St. 61AHD POllS, N. D. MISS DELA ODEGARD East Grand Porks, Minn. Phone 766L 603 DeMers AT. Manufacturer of high grade cigars such as Grand Forks, EAGLES, Globe and the A. 0. U. W. PHONE RICE'S 602L HACKS, DSiTS, DAT OB nei Offlc*. 411 Ddbn Avenue. •W. .KIRK, Prop. H. W. PAGE BRAN MISCELLANEOUS. I a a PAULSNESS Plumbing, Steam and Hot water Fit-' —.Pumps and Windmills. Savers Water works Contractor, Lead: •P* Iro® Pipe and Fittings. Brass Goods, Sewer Pipe, Hose, ate.. GRAND FORKS. N. DAK. KAUFMANN'8 BAKERY, JACOB KACFlAm, East Grand Ferks, &•, The City Feed Store BOWFET iriUli Floor. Feed. Hay and Wood of All Kinds LOGAN CAFE We Serve Revere Cete* ... JS,® B®,t Werld. 19 DeMers Ave. Grand Porks, H. ». MAX RABINOVIOH Keney te lean aO •rtleles ef yb1i« 3 1S9 DeMers Ave. O. YOUNG VMmsIs hraitan ftaaa*, Csrpe4, S««ia| •scUus, Baal sad Office Fsraitsr* us-w-iae seatn am at, Grand Forks, North Dakota TO THOSE WHOM IT MAT CONCERN Everyone who _pwna a phonograafe and reports their name at Getts* ndi house will hear of something te fesla advantage. The M. H. Redlclt HIDE & FUR GO. Northwestern Dealers in Flisa Northern Far*. Hides, Felts, Wool, Tallow, Boot., Etc. Largest and Oldest Hide and Var House in the State. GBAHD FORKS K. sis OBE YOU CANNOT RAISE ANY OBJECTION at any time to the coal that we send to your order, for either quality, weight or cleanliness. Our coal is the best that we can procure, and that means the best that is mined, and we send it to your home screened and free from dirt, slate and stone. And what is more we now hare plenty of it. GIBBS GRAIN AND FUEL GO. Fhoao 600 Offtcei 30B Klttaoa Guarantee Stock Food Company bcerperstsd Capital Stock, 900,000 Manufacturers of Stock Food. t|M» gnr Food. Wona Powder, Idee Tfltea. HeeveCurejPlnk BreSemwIy. Pmt Cnre, Colle Cnre. q»il Cure, Met lia etr and White Liniment •BAUD lorn. i. •. J. A. EVANS Teaeker ef Pan Italian Method of Voice Culture. Pupils wUb be received on Tuesday mornings I a. m. to IS and every week day swl ing. Room 2 Security building, r" Getts Musie store. Columbia Hotel AND KESTAUEAWT (Iitiiitmtohw»Hi waitinefor roar trains N Open Day and Nlrfht OSCAi KWPDSON. ftep'r Batasi 11 mad ILK Mr day OBAND FORKS. N. DAI. Onportte Q. N. Daeot J. B. WOODLEY Wholesale aad Retail HARNESS, WHIPS AND SADDUBT SUPPLIES. ne largest and most complete steea of hand mad. harness In the two ettlea. Manufactured of Lappa A Be oak leather. A ale. 11a. of Saddles 500 pairs of l-A Batam ets to select from at Jobbenr Bole agents for .the celebrated Horse Collars also a fall line and surrey harness a alee track and driving harness sweat whips and snmBMr goods at a Big Se duction. Call and look these over. Telepheaa 110S. AL COONS,