sag* '%H*i I A I Profesionals Cards FLYNN & TRAYNOR LAWYERS Att neys and Counsellors at Law. Practice in all courts. State and Federal EDWARD P. FLYNN Specialty, Titles, Corpora ton and Commercial Law FRED J. TRAYNOR Litigated Cases Probate Practice. Office over 1st Natl Bk. Devils Lake, N. D. Burke, Middaugh & Cuthbert LAWYERS Practice in State and Federal Courts and before the U. S. Land Office. Office in Locke-Gram Block Phone 84 Devils Lake L. J. WEHE ATTORNEY AT LAW Practice in all courts, both state and federal Office in Brennan Block Dr. P. DAHL PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office over Bell's Drug: Store Phone 234 Devils Lake Dr. C. J. McGURREN PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Special attention paid to diseases of the ear,'eye, nose and throat and the fitting of glasses: Miss Helen L. Young, Trained Norse at thiB office. Office in Locke-Gram Black Phone 240 Devils Lake DR. W. F. BIHLER SB. G. J. MCINTOSH ^JU Dr. CLINTON SMITH PARTIAL PAYMENT PLAN We have an unlimited amount of money for farm loans, and will make your loans at a low rate of interest. Principal and interest payable at First National Bank, Devils Lake, N. D. We give you any one of the following plans: A straight five or ten year loan. A loan payable on or before five years. You may pay tne full amount at any time you desire to do so. A loan upon which you may pay any part, or all, of the principal at any time and stop interest on the amount you pay. See us before placing your loans. It will pay you to do so. Drs. S1HLER & McINTOSH PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS Special Nurse: Miss S. E. Bray Qff}(9 }n Mann Block Phone Perils Lake Dr. W. D. JONES WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Bang Block Phones: Office 2 Residence 117 Devils Lake Devils Lake, North Dak. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Bans Block Phones: Office 143 Residence 186" Devils Lake Dr. W. H. CUTHBERT PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Special attention paid to Disease of Women and Children. Office in new Greenber? Blk. Res. 'Phone 400. Office 'Phone 324. Devils Lake Dr. A. T. HORSMAN PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office over Red Cross Drug Store Phone 21 Devils Lake Dr. W. H. BATES, M. D. EYE, EAR, NOSE AND THROAT St. John's Block, Grand Forks, N. D. Telephone 647. Dr. W. C. FOLLETT DENTIST Office: 2nd Floor, Locke-Gram Block Phone 868 Devils Lake Dr. WILLIAM K. MOELLER DENTIST Office in Bang Block Devils Lake Phone 86 Dr. H. G. ROMIG DENTIST Suite 6 and 7, Ma*" Block Office hours: 9 to 12 lto5 Phone 216 Devil* Lake Dr. W. E. HOCKING DENTIST Office in Bang Block Phone 272 Devils Lake MISS MART E. NORTON TEACHER OF PIANO, ORGAN, VOICE. THEORY OF MUSIC AND HARMONY 3 Studio 616 E. Sixth Street Devils Lake DR. J. G. ARNEBERG, M. D. Specialist in diseases of the EYE,.EAR, NOSE andkTHROAT Widlund Building, Office: Over laii Dairy Lunch. TeL N. W. 491 and Tri-S. 488L. GRAND FORKS, N. D. The handwriting on the wall was all 111 itaday, but the person who to scatter news rapidly these mm tlw newspapers sad mag* m. DXSSOX.T7TION NOTICE. Notice is hereby given that the part nership previously existing between J5. H. Howe and C. D. Mills is dissolved. All person will therefore take due notice. NOTICE OF EXECUTION SALE, FOBE ClOSTTEE MECHANICS LIEN. STATE OP NORTH DAKOTA, County of Ramsey—ss. In District Court, Second Judicial Dis trict. Thomas M. Searles, Plaintiff, vs. W. H. Arnold and Emma Arnold, De fendants. Notice is hereby given, that by virtue of an execution issued out of and under the seal of the District Court in and for the County of Ramsey, State of North Dakota, upon a judgment rendered and docketed in the said court on the 11th day of Jnue, 1910, in an action wherein the above named Thomas M. Searles was plaintiff and the above named de fendants W. H. Arnold and Emma Arnold were defendants, in favor of said plain tiff and against said defendants for the sum of 115.09 and whereby it was further adjudged and determined that the plaintiff possessed a mechanics lien for the above sum upon the following described real property, to-wit: Lots six (6), seven (7) and eight (8) of Block 8 in the city of Devils Lake, Ramsey County, North Dakota, and that said premises be sold to satisfy said lien and costs, which execution was directed and delivered to me as sheriff in and for said county of Ramsey and did command me to execute said Judg ment by making sale of said premises herein above described or so much thereof as may be necessary to satisfy said sum so adjudged to be due to the plaintiff with Interest thereon from the date of judgment together with the costs and expenses of sale. And that I, the undersigned, as sheriff as aforesaid, will sell the above describ ed real property to the highest bidder, for cash, at public auction, at the front door of the County Court House In the city of Devils Lake, in the County of Ramsey and State of North Dakota, on the 23rd day of July, 1910, at 2 o'clock P. M. of that day, to satisfy the said execution together with the interest and costs thereon. There will' be due at the time of sale the sum of $116.03 together with recording fee of $1.00, and accrued costs amounting to $2.00, making a total of $119.03 together with the costs and expenses of sale. Dated June 13th, 1910. W. H. Belford, Sheriff In and for Ratn sey County, North Dakota. Flynn & Traynor, Attorneys for Plaintiff, Devils Lake, N. D. SECOND SUMMONS. STATE OP NORTH DAKOTA, County of Ramsey—ss. In Justice Court, before Oeorge Juer gens. Police Magistrate and ex-officlo Justice of the Peace. Louis Mundt and George Rodenbach, co partners doing business under the flrn name and style of Rodenbach f-rd Mundt, plaintiffs vs. Gilbert Thompson, defendant. STTMMONS State of North Dakota to said defendant: By this second summons herein you are directed to appear before me at mv office in the city of Devils Lake, County of Ramsey. North Dakota, at 9 o'clock A. M.. on the 25th day of July, A. D. 1 ind to answer to the complaint of Louis Mundt and George Rodenbach, co partners under the Arm name and Htvl* of Rodenbach and Mundt, the above named plaintiff against you alleging that you purchased from them between January 1st, 1910, and June 10th, 1910, ?oods. wares and merchandise amour.*. lng to $10.80 and that you have not i.ald the same and it appearing sail matter that garnishment proceedings were in stituted on June 11th, 1910, in which f!ie Great Northern Railway Company, a cor poration. was named as garnishee and said garnlsheee having on the 25th ".ay of June. 1910, disclosed In said matter to this court that it is indebted to the defendant in the sum of $85.99. The said plaintiffs demanding herein that the «i:il sum of $85.99 so held by sail tjarui and owing to' you, be applied to tl" satisfaction of the plaintiff's claim •in.', vou are notified that unless VDU so appear and answer the plaintiff will take judgment against you accordingly. GIv fn this 29th day of June, A. D., 1910. George Juergens, Police Magistrate and ex-offlcio Just'ce of the Peace. Flynn & Traynor, Attorneys for Plaintiff. Devils Lake. N. D. WEEDS COST MONEY. Weeds reduce yields. They pump out moisture and take up plant food. And the crop is reduced by that much. When the grain is growing they take out moisture, and after the crop is cat A good deal can he done by discing as soon as the grain is cut. Then plan to grow a crop of corn and a crop of clover every four or five years. This will do much to kill out Weeds and to increase the water holding capa city of the soil. A thin application of stable manure will laso he very help ful. It furnishes humus which acts like a sponge or blotting paper in holding moisture. The plowing under of a green crop is also helpfuL Uiey still keep on. "When the grain is cut the ground will usually plow nicely cross section showing, the Penn but in a month or two the weeds have syivanla's new terminal .and tttnnel pumped out so much moisture that the ground is too dry to plow, breaks up in lumps, so that it is left in poor con dition to take in moisture and also gives it up easily. In this way next year's crop is cut short This will do much toward Increasing the yield and Insuring a crop tmder ad verse weather conditions. W. O. Palmer, AgrL Editor. Department of College Extension, AKrtoflMnrcl CaBcgit, N. D. '•*,«' Photographs by American Press Association. a^, HE battleship Florida, the largest of American warships and the latest thing in super-Dreadnoughts, which was successfully launched at tbe Brooklyn navy yard on May 12 and christened by Miss Elizabeth Legere Fleming, daughter of a former governor of Florida, bas a normal displacement of 21.82B tons, and her turbine engines are expected to give her 28,000 horsepower, which should give her a speed of about 22 knots an hour, although tbe specifications call for 20.78 knots. Her arma ment will be as heavy as any known vessel of her class, and her broadside fire will be 20 per cent greater than any vessel now in commission. There will be many* improvements in this battleship, of which few of the large sea fighters can boast She will be fitted with automatic electric eleva tors, for instance, and all furniture will be metal. Tbe elevator cars will be Installed in the fire room Ventilator trunks. Each elevator will be operated from the cars by means of push buttons and will be utilized by officers who would otherwise have a great deal of climbing to do. The ship is 520 feet longs and 70 feet beam. She Jfrill cost something like $6,000,000 when completed. The main battery of the ship will consist of ten twelve-inch rifles arranged lp pairs in turrets. Looking" at her bow on dne would think that the Florida had what is cajted-superposed or double decked turrets, like the ,Kearsarge1 and Kentucky trat as a matter of fact there are only two guns in each, of theJ five turrets, and'the second turret ln^tjje fore part of the ship is necessarily elevated on the -superstructure so as to be able to fire freely over the top ,of the forward turret There is a formidable secondary battery, composed of. JslXteen 0ve-lnch rap!d flrenfcjfour three-pounders, two one-pounders and a number of machine guns. There are also two twenty-one-inch submerged tubes for torpedoes. The battleship Iowa, one of the most powerful vessels under the American flag during the Spanish-American war, Is not in the same class with the Flori da, which is approximately 10,000 tons heavier and 100 feet longer than Admi ral Evans' old fighter. Besides, the Florida's engines are two and a half times more powerful thftn the Iowa's, her, speed three knots greater. She carries al most a thousand tons more coal. At a distance of four and a half or five miles the Florida could htirl' a broadside of steel missiles weighing 8.500 pounds At this distance the lowa could reply with a broadside weighing but &500 pounds. The Florida will carry a crew of 1,002 men the Iowa's crew was about 600. When the Florida is completed she will wear along her sides amidships near the" water line a belt of eleven Inch armor eight feet or more in width. Above this will be another belt of the same width nine inches thick. A shell in order to penetrate a turret in its most exposed part will be obliged to pass through twelve Inches of as hard steel as was ever manufactured. It is believed that the armor plan for the Florida is the most comprehen sive which bas been devised for any ship. The bull is divided into small compartments. This, it is believed, will decrease the vulnerability in case of the explosion of a torpedo or mine against the side of the vessel. A pow erful battery of pumps will assist in keeping the ship afldat in such an emergency. The turrets or revolving citadels are placed over the keel in a straight line, two forward of the stacks and three abaft It is possible to deliver four shots simultaneously over the how and over the stern. The sixteen five-inch rapid fire guns, eighi ou either side, are placed in steel compart ments of their own. This array of offensive weapons will be directed from platforms on the tops of the two 120 foot lattice masts. On these elevated stages, where they can see the enemy at a distance, the officers by means of their range apparatus can determine with mathematical accuracy the distance of the enemy and his speed. A MODEL OF NEW YORK. Pennsylvania Railroad's Remarkable Exhibit For a Berlin Exhibition.' One of the features of the great tyrmi building exhibition to be held in Ber lin, Germany, in the coming sunjuner will be a thirty-three foot long uibdel of Greater New York, which wiP be shown by tbe Pennsylvania Railroad company. It will include an uhder- schemes as well as the Intricate ^sys tem of lines with which subterranean Gotham is now Interlaced. In one of the miniature tunnels, which is to be an exact reproduction of tbe original in all details except size, a train of cars consisting of three Pullmans pulled by an electric loco motive will make trips, The Pennsylvania company an nounces that its new terminal plant which will be shown in miniature, rep resents a cost of $90,000,000. Farmer's Plan to Dodge the Comet. John Marlow, a farmer ne^r Council Bluffs, Ia„ Is so convinced that Hal ley's comet will spread death end de struction on the earth that he has dog a cave in which he and his family 1 "Vs *-t Sftf .30iVi,-.s fcKiJ v/oHo'i TESTS OF LOW TEMPERATURE Princeton's New Laboratory Gives First 8eientifio Results. There have recently teen installed in Palmer physical lahomtojr I^nce ton university's new 3S00,00& stricture .practically the only su^cessfpl «on stant low temperature noma fa. the world. They nave alrMdyfl'M&< in obtaining results of. great importance to physics and* chemistry, aktd isclen ttsts" generally predict that the new rooms will be 6t will take refuge at the time earth is passing through the tail of the com- the other rooms can be lowered to, et The feature of the cave Is ah air .degrees below sero and maintained at tight door, by which be expects to keep out the poisonous atmosphere. In addition to himself and his family he will take two horses, two cows, a that point. dog, a cht and number of chickens drinking cups for dogs have beej. -A*..., ...T III.: -J.-.' MV.A^I L« WW MIA W &&& ihc^l ralne In deteiinining the truth of sttaanti theo ries which have not heretofore been sufficiently tested because of lack of proper facilities., The temperature of tbe rooms can be kept, at 7 degrees Wlow sero F^ wlth a variation of not more than one-tenth of a degree, which has never before been achieved. They are also kept en tirely dry. and in damp weather no air is admitted except such as may be freed from ail moisture and vapor by a special process used for this pur pose. The walls are protected from outside influence by a six Inch layer of cork. The rooms are cooled by means of the ordinary ammonia process, and. while one room can be lowered from 82 degrees F., the freezing point, to a: few degrees above serp and kept there. Drinking Cups For Chisago Dogs. To reduce the danger of rabies 1.000 placed In different parts of Chicago. The Siamese •A 3 Topknot. Slttiue.v rlilkl. whether tfoy ^orj girl, wmirs its bttfi- lii little topknot' until it bus tiituint'U the age of eleven or twelve .VISITS. Oa reaching thisage the topknot cutting ceremony takes place. The (•liilij Is dressed In Its best and amid nui' Ii rejoicing of relatives and friends tbe topknot is cut one lock at a time. The head Is then Com pletely shaved by the priests. All guests Invited to the ceremony bring presents, usually money, which 1B carefully invested for the child by Its parents or guardians. A young prince or princess will sometimes receive as much a% $25,000 In presents at his or her topknot cutting ceremony, while a poor child may get $10 or $15.—Wide World Magazlnfe Different Ideals. There are as many kinds of love as there are races. A great tall German, learned, virtu ous, phlegmatic, said one day. "Souls are sisters, fallen from heaven. Who all at once recognize and run to meet each other." A little dry Frenchman, hot blooded witty, lively, replied to him: "You are right. You can always find shoes tc fit"—Taine. JDevils Lake fl)eat fytarket ='1 JO ian.n1 iLfOO F. T. FOX, Prop. Step in and look over pur goods and let us take your measure. Prices are right, finest quality 3j*u -J.it Al THE VALUE Of any Paint is determined by its 0il£ 03 W C^sp •'Xv^v'-V^^'^ DAKOTA FLOUR TAKES THE PRIZE among good judges. And even inex perienced bakors find it improves their baking wonderfully. IT'S THE FLOWER OF FLOURS for every purpose. Order a sack to day and see if all the nice things Bald about Dakota flour are not true. Sure* ly when so many housekeepers speak well of it, there must be exceptional merit In It. Made at Home Farmers Mill & Elev Ass'n A Roast of Beef That1 Will Make Your Mouth Water of goods and workman­ ship of the best LEAVE YOUR MONEY AT HOME ii. ii- .7. A Under First Natldhal Bank t-j I ,1. O. 'J 90i-in Bl^-a laj )9fTs covering acity and durability. Unite these two qualities and you have all that can be expected of any^Paint. To answer the first requirement the material muSt be ground fine and properly mixed "with oil. 1 It is very generally conceded both by'paint'experts and by actual experience that the best ingredients to make good Paint are White Lead, Zinc and Pure Linseed Oil. Blood's Mixed Paint, ii! .-. possess all the qualities desired, and if you are at all interested we shcu!d te pleased to furnish «»rnp1e Color Card and quote you priceSj. Hardware l£ln Stevens Grain and Fuel Co. -r.rf .oa ®U^r"fW,nter^^ 1 J- -T •4A ••V-.-OC. I $ 0 isn't rare with us—every day oc currence, in fact. If you know good beef when you see it (of course you do when you eat it). you'll enjoy the sort we serve., Prime cattle, good feeding, know* ing handling and careful cutting explain the reason for our always3 supplying fine roasting beef. 3 1 -•7 0 ".,b "X pd- io ia ()(,! cap­ asnu .J -AIA iO'J Jif 'j/ml vox II lifUtti Is our coal down in your cellar? If it isn't you can have it by telephon ing yonr order to 445. We also carry a" foil line of Hard and Soft wood. Early order means early delivery.