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n*4 11 Mrs. Hodge, a well known resident of Jamestown, died of heart disease. 1 STATE NEWS. Dan Sullivan will build his east side palace recently destroyed in brick. W. S. Gilpin has sold the X-Rays to W. H. Hassing, and is going to Klon dike. Six blind piggers have been convict ed and three have pleaded guilty at Grafton. Jake Heinsfurter and W. S. Daggett 'I of Fargo will move their Castoria plant from Fargo to Chicago. O. A. Wilcox and H. F. Arnold are candidates for the receivership of the defunct Larimore bank. Wallace Gatehouse has been been ap pointed postmaster at Garrington and Major J. G. Pitts at Winona. A petition has been signed in Stark county asking for the calling of a grand jury, to investigate various things.] J. B. Streeter was president of the Larimore bank that suspended and thinks that the bank will be able to re sume. Mrs. A. D. Hilliard of Fargo was a passenger to Klondike on the Steamer Klondike which floundered—going to join her husband who is there. The new asylum bonds were sold to E. D. Sheppard of New York for a premium of $8,000. AB soon as the payment is made new buildings will be erected. Edward Severtson was found guilty of rape at Grafton. Severtson is an Icelander, and the complaining witness was a fourteen year old girl of the same nationality. The Wahpeton correspondent of the St. Paul DiBpatch pulls Fred Falley's leg with a vigorous yank—and says no one stands better in Richland county than thejsecretary of state. A report that Tracy Bangs was to leave the state after the completion of his term as United States district attor ney is denied by Tracy, who says he will live and die in North Dakota. Peter Ramstad was arrested at Minot yesterday on a United States warrant charging him with smuggling 8700 worth of goods across the line to Portal. He will be given a hearing at Devils Lake. The Jamestown Klondike company will probably be numbered with the "might have beens." A number of the members were found to be long on talk and short of cash when the time came to dig. Editor Wood of the Grand Forks Plaindealer fell on the sidewalk and put his shoulder out of joint-perhaps to be able to sympathize with the editor of the Herald, whose nose has been out of oint for some time. The Jamestown asylum board receiv ed a number of offers for the $40,000 of bonds, authorized by the last legisla tive assembly, to be secured by the lands of the institution. The bids ranged from a few dollars below par to a large premium. Among the Minneapolis Journal ex cursionists to Mexico are E. C. Bates and J. W. Smith of Grand Forks, Dr., Mrs. and Miss Grassick of Buxton, A. Ganssle of St. Thomas, Senator and Mrs T. F. Marshall of Oakes, nnd W. W. Reyleck of Grafton. Willian J. Lavine, who stole 70 bush els of wheat, ten miles north of Rugby, came into court and was sentenced to one year and eight months in the peni tentiary at hard labor. Lavine claims to be a direct descendant of Napoleon Bonaparte, and also distantly connected with the Marchioness of Abercorn. Pierce county people made complaint against Sheriff Sikes of that county, al leging carelessness and incompetency in office, with a view to removing him, and the papers in the case were given the coroner to serve but Sikes has skipped the flat and cannot be found. The com plaint against him is letting a blind pigger escape. One day's sale of Northern Pacific lands in Stark county, through the com pany's Dickinson agency, amounted to five sections, or 3,200 acres. The sales in January were 12,000. Most of the purchases are being made by farmers and small cattlemen, who have taken up government land and wish to avail them selves of water privileges and abundance of grazing land for their stock. Papers have been filed with the in surance commissioner for the organiza tion of a Wahpeton mutual insurance company. The originator of the scheme is J. J. Harris, who lately came from Iowa to Wahpeton. He has the follow ing local parties interested with him: Daniel Patterson, president of the Na tional 'bank of Wahpeton Joseph Pat terson, vice president of the National bank of Wahpeton W. L. Carter, cash ier, National bank of Wahpeton George P. Garred and Attorney B. J. Howald. Grand Forks Herald: L. F. Mason of Larimore appeared in Judge Brown's court yesterday and plead guilty to the charge of assault on Dora Hendrickson, .• who was employed in his restaurant. Mr. Mason promptly paid the fine im posed by the court, and afterwards ex pressed himself to a number of friends as well satisfied, remarking that he "didn't believe in baking feet and pieB in the skme oven and that his guests p* ""1 afraid of eating dirty cook- need not be ing-" LaMoure and Cando have furnished Klondike parties. A county seat war is billed for Pem bina county next fall. It is stated Jud LaMoure has gone to Mexico to buy a silver mine. A number of Valley City residences, will be lighted with acetylene gas. Orlando Cornell, an old man of large family, committed suicide near Dickin sno. Dr. Smith of Dickinson will go to Klondike to practice, and locate a good claim on the side. Editor Streeter of "the Emmons Coun ty Record is happy over the decision of the WellB county tax case. A state Maccabee picnic will be held at the state Chautauqua grounds at Devils Lake next summer. H. A. Birtsh of Langdon got a fractured skull and other injuries while playing hockey at the ice rink. The public schools at Mandan have been closed for a week on account of scarlet fever, which is prevalent. The papers in the appeal in the Crnm disbarment case have been prepared and will be eent to the supreme court. John I. Moore, the defaulting presi dent of the Minot Coal company left debts amounting to 83,000 at Minot. Lieutenant Albright, the new govern ment military instructor has arrived at the state university at Grand Forks. Casselton is furnishing city arc lights for $65 a year. Cando has also started its light plant, which gives general satisfac tion. The Valley City electric light plant is inadequate to the necessities of the city and another dynamo will have to be procured. Ernie Kent of the Nelson County Herald gets the nominating fever and suggests Private Secretary Phelps for governor. Now that the blind pigs have been cleaned out, the peripatetic bootlegger has begun to make his appearance in Devils Lake. Wonders will never cease. Tom Sloan, the well known passenger conductor has been appointed a director in the Y. M. C. A. at Fargo. Jamestown people are gratified over the successful sale of the asylum bonds. It will mean the expenditure of over 840,000 at the asylum. Theodore Laue is suing the James river valley bank for 85,000, claiming he was injured to the extent by a horse which he bought of the bank. There is an attack of Klondicitis at Wahpeton, and a party with $10,000 capital is to be organixed, headed by Dr. Quick and Editor Garred. The Northern Pacific has paid the taxes levied under the retroactive act at Fargo. It has also settled its delin quent taxes in Richland county. No receiver will be appointed for the First National bank of Larimore at present, the officials of the bank being given time to raise money to liquidate. St. Thomas, Pembina county, claims the unique distinction of not having a man, woman or child who is affected by the gold fever and the Klondike craze. The teachers of Mcintosh county are reported to have refused "to attend It The board of trustees 1SMARCK WEEKLY TKlBTOtt: FRIDAY. FEB. 11 1898 Awarded Highest Honors—World's Pair. Gold Medal, Midwlater Fair. Dlt CREAM BAHNfi mm A Pare Grape Cream of Tartar Powder. 40 YEARS THE STANDARD, Colonel Lounsberry to be made from the Argus. Miss Emma Arnold has been appoint ed postmaster at Larimore. In leaving a car at Los Angeles Cal., Col. W. H. Robinson sustained a pain ful accident breaking the ligament of the left knee. ot the asylum visited the asylum at Fergus Falls, Minn., to get pointers for the new ward building to be constructed at Jamestown. ^Devils Lake citizens want a pardon from the governor for A. McKay, on old man of seventy years, who was sen tenced to 90 days and 8200 fine for selling liquor. There is an awfnl thirst at Minne waukan. S.une one lowered a pint of alcohol to the prisonersin the jail down the chimney, and there was a hot time in the jail that night. The Valley City Alliance calls down the social lightB in that place who attend dances where there are ladies and persist in spitting tobacco juice on the floor, stoves and chairs. It is reported that the state's attorney of Towner county refuses to serve injunc tional orders issued by Judge Morgan against blind pigs and that the state's attorney is to be arraigned on the charge of contempt of court. The First National Bank of Hillsboro on Wednesday sold a half section of land for 87,200, or 822.50 per acre. The land is eight miles from the nearest market, contains no improvements whatever and is in stubble. Fargo Argus: On the morning of February 17 Judge A. B. Guptill, Street Commissioner O'Neil and party will leave for the Klondike country. Walter Preston will be taken along as a cook for the party. They expect to reach the Klondike country among the first this spring and will probably remain there about a year. Word was received at Wheatland by Mrs. A. W. Fuller that her father had died and left an estate valued at $30,- reading circle meetings held at Ashley coropromised with the sheriff for his until blind pigs and other disreputable *ee® for selling lands for delin- houses are closed." Fire destroyed the barn and twenty head of stock belonging to Carl Francine, a farmer living a mile from Ellendale. Incendiarism[is suspected, and Elias En derson is under arrest. Secretary Higgins of the Record Publishing Company has resigned—it is said all is not harmony in the company —since Higgins sold Argus stock to Jordan, and thus enabled the rout of 000,000 in the old country. The money will be divided pro rata between the Blights, children. These are Mrs. John Hill, and on her own motion it was trans- ^r®_ternble ferred by the county commissioners to a fund for a summer school in Cass county. The Dickey county commissioners quent taxes for 818352, and his fee of 85.60 a description is allowed to stand against the lands to be paid when any purchaser purchases any of these lands. A Dickinson party which went to Port Wrangel, writes back to the Recorder giving particulars of the place. It is stated that wages'for carpenters range about 35 cents an hour, and prices for living range about the same as at Dickinson. One man bought a 40 pound fish for 15 cents—enough for a week. IDEAL GRANDMOTHERS. Women Who Enow the Laws of Nature and Obey Them May Live to Green Old Age. Mrs. Plnkham Bays When We Violate Nature's L|«I' Our Punishment Is Fain—If We Continue to Neglect the Warning We Die. Providence has allotted us each at least seventy years in which to fulfill our mission in life, and it is generally our own fault if we die prematurely. Nervous exhaustion invites disease. This statement is the positive truth. When everything becomes a burden and you cannot walk a few blocks without excessive fatigue, and yon break out into perspirations easily, and your face flushes, and you grow excited and shaky at the least provoca tion, and you cannot bear to be crossed in anything, you are in dan ger your nerves have given out you need building up at once! To build up woman's nervous system and re store woman's health, we know of no better or more inspiring medicine than Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Your ailment taken in time can be thrown off, ifjieglected it will run on into great suffering and pain. Here is an illustration. MBS. LUCY GOODWIN, Holly, W. Va., says: I suffered with nervous prostration, faintness, all-gone feeling and palpi tation of the heart. I could not stand but a few moments at a time without having that terrible bearing-down sensation. "When I commenced taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound I only weighed 108 pounds', and could not sit up half a day before, however, I had used a whole bottle* I was able to be about. I took in all about three bot tles of the Compound, and am entirely cured now I weigh 131 pounds and feel like anew woman, stronger and better than ever in my life." So it transpires that because of the virtues of Mrs. Pinkham's wonderful Compound, even a very sick woman can tie cured and live to a green old age. They expect to leave up the Stickeen river about the middle of March. The body of Andrew P. Willner was found Sunday afternoon hanging to a beam in a bnrn about nine miles east of Tower City. Life had evidently been extinct for several hours. The injuries to Col. Robinson at Los Angeles are said to be serious and may leave him a cripple. He attempted to board a moving electric car and fell, tearing the ligaments loose from his right knee. His friends in the state will regret the accident. An immense golden eagle was cap tured near Fessenden, and kept for a long time by Proprietor John Foos of the hotel there. It killed chickens, dogs, cats, and everything that came within reach and was the curiosity of the neighborhood, until tho wife of the owner, becoming tired of having her chickens killed for the edification of spectators, dropped a little strychnine into the cage, and the eagle ate thereof and was no more. The Larimore Pioneer is publishing some state historical incidents and events of pre-settlement days. It tellB of the record made by Capt- Alex Henry of the N. W. Fur Co. in 1800, who kept a diary of events in Pembina county. In that year the whole country was invaded by the Rocky mountain locusts. They formed a ridge along the Red river bank 6 to 9 inches high, having been cast ashore by waves and devastated all the green vegetation of the country. Attorney Taylor Crum has been dis barred from practicing law in North Dakota by a decision in the disbarment case which has just been handed down by Judge Glaspell. There was a num ber of cases againt Crum, alleging un professional conduct, the most serious of which was an attack on Judge Pol lock, where Crum called him a cur and other choice names in open court. The court at the time sentenced Crum to 8200 fine and a jail sentence. The whole matter will probably be brought to the supreme court for settlement. Minneapolis Times: Jud LaMoure, the picturesque North Dakota poli tician, and staff are at the Brunswick hotel. Mr. LaMoure declined to dis cuss politics with the Times, saying that it was a subject in which he had to take an active interest. The staff consists of C. S. Bauer, H. O'Brien, H. L. Holmes and W. A. Murphy, all of Neche, N. D. The party is bound for the city of Mexico. Mr. LaMoure said that they might combine business with pleasure and that the organization of a company, for what purpose he would not say, was a possibility. A Wahpeton man, who recently re turned fram Klondike, has a hard tale to tell of the sufferings he saw coming over the pass. He drew his own across and succeeded all right, but says he passed several parties, who had left ahead of him that were in awful doubled Mrs. P. J. McLaren, Messrs. Henry and I waiting for death. He could not make William Baker of Buffulo and Mrs. ithe of Cass county did not draw all she was entitled to for clerk hire etc, by $205, He found one poor fellow UP in a snow bank, anxiously triP- In Fuller of. Wheatland. fingers of one of the men were dropping County Superintendent Mattie Davis off another party of two, the fl"T °ne ha"d the ?8ul\ hardships in some instances but the rush i« grater than George Saxton bf Wahpeton pleaded guilty to running a blind pig and was sentenced to ninety days in jail and to pay a fine of 8120. Henry Miller, who runs a pig at Mooreton, was tried and found guilty getting ninety days and $100 fine. Ralph Maxwell, of Lidger wood, who has been before the court for running a blind pig, pleaded guilty to running a gambling room and was I fined 81C0. When he went into tho sheriff's office to pay his fine ho as' saulted Deputy Sheriff Dan Jones, and although Maxwell is considerable of a pugilist he no doubt regrets his attack upon young Jones, as Maxwell is now under the doctor's care. Minneapolis Journal: J. S. Green of Mandan is no longer in danger of pun ishment for contempt for failure to turn over certain partnership property to the receiver of a business in which he was interested. Owing to an extended ab sence, Mr. Green was unable to comply with an order of the Hennepin courts, and contempt proceedings were insti tuted. A hearing was finally secured' when Mr. Green agreed to secure cer tain property he had disposed off, as he claimed, to good advantage. The re ceiver was not satisfied,.and demanded its surrender. In view of the return now made by Mr. Green, the court has discharged the contempt proceedings. Judge Glaspell has entered an order in the case against Druggist Baldwin of Jamestown, against whom a eivil action was brought for the sale of liquor. The injunctional order against the building and premises is made per petual. The defendant's permit to 6ell intoxicating liquor as a druggist is cancelled, and be is denied the right to obtain a permit within five years after judgment. The liquors seized by the sheriff are ordered distroyed publicly in the court house yard at 3 p. m. Feb. 19, 1898. The costs in the suit, including reasonable attorney's fees, are taxed against the defendant and the premises and stock of drugs thereon to answer therefor. The store property and the stock thereon are ordered returned to Dri Baldwin upon the payment of all coBts. ESTABLISHED, 1872. HOTELS Bled of the e*l°BU™ underSone' Ih°tale°f JOSEPH HARE. SHELF AND HEAVY HARDWARE. Farm machinery, wagons, bug gies, harness. Finest line of winter robes and horse blankets ever offer ed for sale in the city of Bismarck. I keep nothing but the best goods. Good goods. Cost but little more JOSEPH The New, First Class Accommodations At Moderate Prices than cheap John's. When you buy look to quality and you will save money. I invite the public to ex amine my goods before purchasing. Don't forget the place, Main street, next door to Tribune block. •Jr=Jr=Jr=Jr=Jr=Jr=mS=) Is now open, and offers to the local find transient public GRAND PACIFIC HARE This hotel Is new throughout, and has all conveniences, In eluding Steam Heat, Baths and Electric Lights. Grand Pacific psitrons will 11ml clean, light, comfortable rooms, excellent table service, and courteous treatment. HENRY TATLEY. Proprietor. The Old Reliable Shoe Man. The cold weather Is coming on and I am prepared to meet the demand with the best ltUMJEll GOODS, GERMAN SOCKS, FELT HOOTS and the best assortmeut of FELT SHOES and the LOWEST fiUCES In the city My long experience in the shoo business gives mo the ad vantage over all other dealers in buying good goods for less The Shoe Maker for the People. BISMARCK, &SB888S8g8S8S88SS8&! Louis Larson. NOTICE. The trusteeship of the Hoagland lumber yard has ceased, and from and after this date I will have charge of the business. All bills due the firm will be collected by me. I have resumed entire charge of the business. Bismarck, January 31, 1898. JOHN P. HOAGLAND. Gull River Lumber Co Lumber and Building Material-Wholesale and Retail vncun Stif Bismarck. DAKOTA M, IS® 5