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bs ee! y Entered at the Posto e 'D., es Second Class Matte WSBUED EVERY DAY EXCEPT SUND- SUBSCE PAYABLE IN Daily, by carrier, : 28 BF Daily, by nail, per © 4.00 Cally by mit oN three montha - , tte Gaby, bm mai! outside Dakota, we year ‘ +m Osily, 05 mai) outsice ) three monthe Weekly, by mail, per year. @. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY Bpecial Foreign Representative @Bw YORK, Fifth Ave. Bidg.; CHICAGO, Meraucte’ Bidg.; BOST: 8 Winter Bt.; DETROIT, Kreage Bidg.; MINNE- LIB, $10_ rchanke _ TEMBiER OF ASSOCIA’. -D PR ‘Sho Associated Preas ic exclusively “{tled to the use for repudlication of ai. news credited to it or net other- wise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of repudlie-rion of special dispatches berein are 2:50 reserved. Member Audit Burcau of Circulation — WEATHER REPORT g at noon Oct. 3 4. Tm. noon.. : Trace Fo-ecast for North Dakota: Generally fair to- night and Thursday; w ght ard north por- to west winds. cooler Thursdi tions; fresh wi Lo Temp: teal atures Fargo Williston .. on Pierre .......- St. Paul . i Winnipeg ......+ Helena Chicago . 60 | 62 i} ORRIS W. ROBERTS, Meteorogohist. | ALMOST UNANIMOUS. Seldom has the state pre such unanimity denounced any vigorously as Townley and LaFoil They reflect the contempt of Dakota for the propaganda which! seeks to hamper the prosecution of the war. Governor Frazier is not mentioned as much as Townle denunciations of last w the press knows that th ui gards him as the shadow and echo of the president of the league. All that is said in censure of Townley applies with equal force to Frazier. mes the Courier-News, off-) of the league, with a de LaFoliette. This clearly in- the hypocrisy of Townley, who | before the Minnesota safety! on when asked if LaFollette’s with re. com sentiments were his and whether hej had consented to the delivery of the itious speech that has aroused the) nation. i Tuesday morning's paper, the ews states that LaFolictie’ the common people sion and the int In Couri love warped his 8 hae for of his crifice is responsible for hia views on the war. It would be interesting to know the Process of reasoning by which the edi tor of the Couricr-News arrives at conclus The defense 07 the Wia- nator is us viciows as it is) unique. It merely indicates that the! mouthpiece of Townley and Frazier secks to gloss over and explain the} conaeis utterances of the Hun 2AM OUP Bul. eae consin ¥ Herewith are a few crpts trom the state press indicating the brand of loyalty that is so lacking in our state administration: Westhope Standard: “Tho speakers at the St. Paul meeting, heralded as simply a gathering of the consumer and producer to give aid (mark the word) to the government, were made up as follows: Townley, socialist and political ba Frazier, titular gover- nor; Bacr, LaFollette, who has ‘no place in the senate; Gronna, who is aping LaFollette; Van Lear, Minne- apolis socialist mayor. And the audi- ence was largely made up of the class of people who wanted to hear the kind of stuff they did hear.” toe 6 MeVille Journal: “It is with shame the North Dakotans must hang their heads when they are compelled to read that one of our U. S. senators still insists on playing Friday to La- Follette in his seditious course. Since} the days of Vallandigham, the leader of the copperheads in Lincoln's day. nothing as graceful has been parad- ed before our country as the treason-| able speech of LaFollette before Town- | ley’s personally conducted mass meet-! ing at St. Paul last week. eee Burnstad Comet: “The recent dis- loyal meeting in St. Paul has finally torn the mask from the leaders of the} Nonpartisan league. Free speech is a} sacred right. A. C. Townley and Sen-| ator LaFollette have it. With it they have shot poisoned bullets into the backs of our boys who have gone to the front. By their disloyal and treasonable utterances they will only} prolong the war and add fearfully to the blood task of our soldier boys.” Divide County Journal: “Senator LaFollette is not with the American people in this war. He challenges; the justice of our cause for entering the war. He mocks at our grievances ‘+ oy themsels st Germany. He impugns the e of the admini i s the secret service, and in democ- His speech! at the conference was an exhibition of uncontrollable wrath. He could not} in himself sufficiently to deliver} : speech prepared for the occasion, | threw away his manuscript and| 4 out a frenzied attack on the} <, the “representatives of wealth,” ret service, the department of} ice and the administration's pro- | acing the war. a speech calculated to in-| > minds against a belief in the| faith of the country in this war.” | «2 8 | ) Herald: “It may be possible/ to aistort cne’s mental conception | of right and wrong as to make one-/ self believe that he is a loyal patriot) tion h| tential enemy to his country. Sena-/ tors Laroliette and Gronna, and oth- evs with whom they have chosen to 8, seem to be in such a ame of mind just now. “They seem to feel that in criticiz-| ing the government, and arraigning it for its past and present attitude to- It isn’t all ‘‘Tramp, Tramp, Tramp the Boys are Marching.” the comforts of home,’’ as Dorman shows here. Lots of the time they have ‘‘all wards and conduct of the war, they are performing a real patriotic serv- Their attitude is either one of wilful and delizerate falsehood, or else betrays utter mental and moral incom- petence in handling the affairs of state at this critical period in our history. “In efther case they are displaying a doubtful type of patriotism, danger- ire. Here is the spirit of service to a' great cause at its very best and high-! est. There was no hesitation on Ford’s part; no calculation, no profiteering, not even the ordinary cogitation of the business man asked to part with a considerable part of his property. { ‘ Devil Pens Epistle _ To Kaiser Wilhelm There is a message in Ford's tele- | , Louis Syberkrop of Creston has ac- North; t | pa an’ ma, an’ sister who during th’ ous and hurtful, if not worse, and their’ constituents should deal with them ac- cordingly. “They are not making democracy safe at home by hindering and ham- g its progress at the battle front, e men, their own countrymen, are fighting and dyin’ to make the world safe for democracy. “You cannot stab a man in the back gram for all of us. “POTASH AND PERLMUTTER IN SOCIETY.” Local theatregoers who laughed at the whimsicajities of “Potash and Perlmutter” when last’ seen here, will be glad to learn that their old friends will be at the Auditorium tomorrow night in a new play along original lines called “Potash and Perlmutter in Society,” which is a continuation of the inimitable “Abe” Potash and and be his real friend. You cannot,)“\‘awruss” Perlmutter on Montague at the same time, be a helpful con-j| Glass’ Saturday Evening Post stories. structionist and a hurtful destructioa-| The stage version was made by Rol Cocper Mergue, author of “It Pays to Advertise,” “Under Cover,” and New York's: present reigning success “Seven Chances.” Mr. Glass is = known to millions of playgoers and readers as the.creator of the two WERE THE DAYS! most famous characters in contempor- when Saturday came an’|ary fiction. The new play will ‘be pre- yu grabbe ck. “Yoo-Ha0ed” | sented under the managerial direction . ee , ot A. H. Woods. ee ue aes Sane ie So unprecedented was the success weekly nuttin edi vas on? ranting anarchy y are not set to THOSE ember lof “Potash and Perlmutter’ through- Member how you climbed all over|out the tengia aut a of Uncle + t saint: bok , “ks g ) Sam's domaim, as wel as in London nee ue aes Lee, threw Focks, and ond the English provinces, that a new sticks to bring down th’ greea balls! pay portraying tne further adventures you couldn't reach with your hands?|of Potash and Perlmutter followed Oa yi q|emnese as a matter of course. The mber how you shouted and) rot was “Potash and Perlmutter in yelied, took many a tumble in fine| ji a comedy drama in which Spartan style, and worked like Samj~“alc and “Mawriss” 2 Hill to get a Jarger pilé of nuts thanj time into -an ‘alien million, find to their. ccst that they are unsuited for th’ others? | ir, and end where they began, poorer, ‘Member how you pounded those! but wiser and rfore lovable men. shells, g.t th’ green hu!l juice in your; The includes Smone its ae eye! fay ed your hand: ty im such notables as Jules alee NM reds oF Oe re pial Jordan and Chas. Lipson in the roles washing ‘em didn't “do a bit of g00d”) of sane” potash and “Mawruss” Perl- for weeks? mutter. Others include Pearl Sinde- ‘Member how sister an’ teacher|/ar. Jennie Moscowitz, Eleanor Mar-/ Soren aver y tin, Roma Ray, Ann Sydell, Jean Grey, frowned upon those rapidly darkening! \aurice Barrett, Dore Rogers, Louis y| fingers, and womanlike suggested! Morre!l, Edwin Maxwell, Wm. Ety, gloves? Jos. Swaine, J. J. Powers, Jos. Red- man, Arthur Chas. Pierson, Robert Barber, and others of equal note. "Member how you nearly broke your neck climbing up on th’ barn roof to put th’ nuts up high for th’ waning autumn sun to dry? i 'c.ber huw you had the “bestest of times” those winter evenings when you cracked those walnuts an’ treated Yesterday when we announced our word contest we failed to incjude a We beg your pardon. PAUL'S POSTOFFICE PLACE. nutting se2son scorned to touch “those ‘Member? No? Oh, shucks! You never was a MINNEAPOLIS, way! No. 3 yellow corn ...... 191 . 190 178 No. 3 mixed . Other grades... )0- PACIFISTS AND PACIFISTS. Oats 2.W. Mont ....... 64 @ 66 There are two kinds of pacifists in| No, 2 white oats ... 59 @ 61 this country. There are real pacifists| Arrive,........... £9 @ 51 who were, therefore, loath to see this poe white oats ee He ‘ if Me DAVTICON s csrascS ae 5 5 D 7 country plunged into war. These, once NOOSE White-oats 57%@ 60 the great decision was made by the} Larley ....... . 116 @132 president and senate, loyally and patri-| Choice barley . + 132) @13 otically accepted the verdict. They|Rye ..... tee . 186% @ 1874 showed their true Americanism by try- Be, focarrive ¢ bs %@187% ing to do everything possible to help] #iax ar: * 391 their country win the war. Old Dec. oats . The other kind of pacifist is the fake| New os - 5T%@ 59 pacifist, the men and women who| ¢™ May oats . aelt knowingly, treacherously and disloyal- DULUTH. ly are playing the German game. Oats on track ........46 59 @ 60 Before we went into war they sought Oats to arrive 3 . . | Rye on track 186 to have us continue enduring insults, Rye to arrive 185 affronts and crimes. Since we have! '*rlev on track . 110 @187 gone in their effort has been to para-| Flax on track and arrive 321% lyze the war-making arm of the gov- ener tas ; aut P ernment by fighting the draft and by] poo. flax ” 518% the spread of kaiserist gospel. eoeiaonenias There is no better type of the true *—— CATTLE MARKETS and loyal pacifist than Henry Ford.| i CATTLE MARKETS i He is sincerely and honestly opposed | to war. He spent a big sum on what; proved a futile pilgrimage to get the} ST. PAUL. HOGS—Receipts, 2,400, steady; with | Secured an assassin to. remove old King Frederick of Denmark, and later rodbed that country of tWo provinces that gave Germany an opportunity to . | become a naval power. Murder is dirty the range at $18.00@18.90; bulk, belligerents out of the trenches before] $18.5018.75. a certain Christmas day. CATTLE—Receipts, 5,100; killers, ! steady to strong; steers, $5.00@14.25; cows and heifers, $6.00@9.00; veal calves, steady, $5.50@14.50; stockers and feeders, steady to strong, $5.0.W 10.00. But the moment his country de- ed war that also became Henry and he demeaned himself according! He delivered a message the other day that is one of the fine big things of this era. He ns in Boston a tremendous er, with lambs at $8.00@10.00; weth- ers, $7.00@13.00, and ewes at $5.00@ 11.00. assembling plant which bears an im- CHICAGO. tant relati 2 q Aes sion to the Ford business; yiogs Receipts, 15,000, unsettled; New. ene and. bulk. $18.50@19.45; light, $18.55@" A war department official reported| 19 mixed, $18.15@19.60; heavy, $18.15@19.55; rough, pigs, $14.00@17.90. CATTLE—Receipts. 17.000. strong: this plant was ideal for certain gov- $18.15@ 18.35; ernment needs. The secretary of war expressed a desire to have it at a proper rental. Ford didn’t take time to answer by letter. He wired just four words, about the biggest words @11.25: cows and heif- ; calves, $9.50@ 16.00. come for a, Ross, Roy MacNicol, ! prize for Bismarck’s seventh educa-' tional institution, the Indian school. i under her rule wild tribes become native beef steers, $7.20@17.50; west- | . $6.55@10.00; stockers and! SHEFP—Receipts, 19,000, strong: he could have used: g a 2 wethers, $9.10@12.90; lambs, $13.5 “No RENT; TAKE IT.” Arai ee Hele quired much fame in recent weeks as author of a satire on Kaiser Wilhelm. { Requests have come to him from Tumulty, Secretary Daniels and Roose- | velt, and people in every state of the | union and in Canada have asked for copies of It is: “Ottumwa, Iowa. “The Infernal Region. June 28, 1917. “To Wilhelm von Hohenzollern, King of Prussia, Emperor of All Germany and Envoy Extraordinary of Al- mighty God: Z “My Dear Wilhelm: “I can call you by that familiar fname for I have always been very close to you, much closer than you! could ever know. “From the time that you were yet an undeveloped ‘being in your moth- er’s womb I have shaped your destiny for my own purpose. “In the days of Rome I created a roughneck known in history as Nero. He was a vulgar character and suited my purpose at: that particular time. In these modern, days a classic demon and. efficient super-criminal was need- ed, and. as I know the Hohenzollern blood, I picked you as my special in- strument to place on earth an annex of hell. I gave you abnormal ambi- tion, likewise an over: supply of ego- tism that-you.might not discover your own failings; I twisted your mind to that of a mad man with certain nor- mal tendencies to carry you by, a most dangerous character placed in power; I gave you the power of a hypnotist and a certain'magnetic force j that you. might sway your people. I am responsible for the deformed arm that hangs helpless on your left, for your crippled condition embitters your life and destroys all noble im- : pulses that might otherwise cause me anxiety, but your strong sword arm is driven by your ambition that squelches all sentiment and pity; I placed in your soul a deep hated for all things English, for of all nations on earth I hate England most: wher- ever England plants her -flag she brings order cit of chaos and the hated Cross follows the, Union Jack; tillers of the soil and in due time practical citizens; she is the great civilizer of the globe and I HATE HER. I planted in your soul a cruel hatred for your mother because SHE was English and left my good friend { Bismarck to fan the flame I had kin- dled. Recent history proves how well our work was done. It broke your royal mother’s heart, but I gained my purpose. “The inherited disease of the Hoh- enzollerns killed your father, just as it will kill you, and, you became the ruler of Germany and a tool of mine sooner than I expected. “To assist you and further hasten my work I sent you three evil spir- its, Nietzsche Treitschke and later Bernhardi, whose teachings inflamed the youths of Germany, who in good time would be ‘willing and loyal sub- jects and eager to spill their blood and pull your chestnuts, yours and mine; the spell.has been perfect—you cast your ambitious eyes toward the Mediterranean, Egypt, India and the Dardanelles and you began your great railway to Bagdad, but the ambitious archduke and his more ambitious wife stood in your way. It was then that I sowed the seed in your heart | that blossomed into the assassination of the duke and his ‘wife, and all hell smiled when it saw how cleverly you saddled the crime on to Serviay I saw you set sails for the fjords of Norway and I knew you would prove an alibi. How cleverly done, so: much like your nodle grandfather, who also work, but it takes a Hohenzollern to make a way and get by. “Your opportunity was at hand; you set the world on fire’and bells of SHEEP—Receipts, 6,500, 26¢ high-| hell were ringing: your rape’on Bel- gium caused much joy, it was the be- sinning, the foundation of a perfect hell on earth, the destruction of noble cathedrals and other infinite works of art was hailed with joy in the in- fernal regions. You made war on ‘friends and foe alike and the murder of civilians showed my teachings had borne fruit. Your treachery toward neutral nations hastened a universal upheaval, the thing I most desired. Your under-sea warfare is a master stroke, from the smallest mackerel pot to the great Lusitania you show no favorites; as a war lord you stand su- preme, for you have no mercy; you have no consideration for the baby clinging to its mother’s breasts as oe Mr. Syberkrop's article. | ,; they both go down into the deep to- gether, only to be torn apart and lei- surely devoured by sharks down among the corals. “I have strolled over the battleselds of Belgium and France. I have seen your hand of destruction everywhere; it’s all your work, super-fiend that 1 made you. I have seen the fields of Poland; now a wilderness fit for prowling beasts only; no merry chil- dren in Poland now; they all suc- cumbed to frost and starvation—I drifted down into Galicia where for- merly Jews and Gentiles lived happily together; I found but ruins and ashes; I felt. a curious pride in my pupil for it was all above my expectation. I was in Belgium when you drove the peaceful population before you like cattle into slavery; you separated man and wife and forced them to hard labor in trenches. I have seen the most fiendishirape committed on young women and those who were forced in- to maternity were cursing the father of their offspring and I began to doubt if my own inferno was really up-to- date. “You have taken millions of dollars from innocent victims. and called it indemnity; you have lived fat on the land you usurped and’ sent the real owners away to starvation. You have strayed away from all legalized war methods and introduced a code of your own. You have killed and robbed the people of friendly nations and de- stroyed their property. You are a liar, a hypocrite and a bluffer of the highest magnitude... You are a part of mine and yet: you pose as a per- sonal friend of'God. Ah, Wilhelm, you are a wonder. You wantonly destroy all things in your path and leave noth- ing for coming generations. “I was amazed when I saw you form a partnership with the impossible Turk, the.chronic killer of Christians, and you a devout worshipper in the Lutheran church. I confess, Wilhelm, you are a puzzle at times. A Moham- medan army, commanded by German officers, assisting one another in mas- sacreing Christians is a new line of warfare. When a Prussian officer can witness a nude woman being disem- bowled by a swarthy Turk, commit- ting a double murder with one cut of his saber, and calmly stand by and see a house full of Innocent Armenians locked up, the house saturated with oil and fired, then my teachings did not stop with you, but have been ex- tended to the whole German nation. I confess my Satanic soul grew sick and there and then I knew the pupil had become the master.. I am a back num- ber, and, my dear Wilhelm, I abdicate in your favor. The great key of hell will be turned over to you. The gavel that has struck the doom of damned souls since time began is yours. I am satisfied with what I have done; that my abdication in you favor is for the very best interests of hell——in the future I am at your majesty’s service. “Affectionately and sincerely, “LUCIFEP. H. SATAN.” ED FREE TO ASTHMA SUFFERERS A New Home Cure That Anyone Can Use Without Discomfort or Loss of Time. ‘We have a New Method that cures Asthma, and we want you to try it at our expense. No matter whether your case is of long standing or recent de- velopment, whether it is present as occasional or chronic Asthma, you should send for a free trial of our method. No matter in what climate you live, no matter what your age or occupation, if you are troubled with asthma, our method should relieve you promptly. We especially want to send it to those apparently hopeless cases, where all forms of inhalers, douches, opium Preparations, fumes, “patent smokes,” etc., have failed. We want: to show everyone at our own expense, that this new method is.designed ‘to end all dif- ficult breathing, all wheezing, and all those terrible paroxysms at once and for all time. This free offer is too important to neglect a single day. Write now and then begin the method at.once. Send no money. Simply mail coupon be- low. Do it today. FREE ASTHMA COUPON FRONTIER ASTHMA CO., Room 1123S, Niagara and Hudson Sts., Buffalo, N. Y. ; Send free trial of your method to: | HE CONQUERED PAN ) MAKE AMERICAN ANGEL WERCY A CREAT WAR HERO By J. Herbert Duckworth. Staff Special. ih New York, Oct. 3—HE CON- QUERED PAIN! Will that tablet place Gordon Edwards’ name in the hall of fame? While thousands upon sands of- wounded soldiers are writhing in agony Edwards has appeared on the battlefield as an! angel of mercy, with a simple chemical solution he calls Nikal- gin, which he has st last succeed- ed ip having war hospitals adopt as a means of killing pain. Onee a hospital orderly, Edwards has had a long uphill fight. It is he old story of the snubbed pio-| neer or inventor at last coming into his own. thou-; Edwards, now about 30, a ‘coeds: © R pe. carDpoN EDWARDS raduate of Stanford, worked aj os few years as an electrical engin-' wrote that he had verified the an- , while orderly in a tiseptic properties of Nikalgin. It Titel Bs oe doctors be- killes the germs of atreprodoee moan the fact that there was no staphylococci and lockjaw. ut perfect anesthetic for dentistry. France would not take it up. : He determined to discover one.! Again Anne Morgan came to the He plunged into the study of med- reszue. She got Edwards a hear- icine. After a year’s rescarch he ing with the Second Army in Ver- eame across a long-forgotten form- ula for a solution that has re- markable analgestic properties. Edwards came to New Yorf, al- most penniless, to go in for den- tal anethesia, and get back some of his money. Then the war broke out. In September, 1914, while in the Red Cross head- quarters, he saw his chance to serve humanity by ‘conquering pain. He asked for a tryout at the hospitals, but was brusquely of galfons | France. turned down everywhere. Finally he interested Miss Anne Morgan. With her letter of introduction he visited the Vanderbilt ‘clinic. There he was given opportunity to try his sol- ution on an old woman with-pain-| ful leg ulcers that the physicians admitted were ‘‘a scandal to the profession.’ .Nikalgin killed the nein. Twenty Sve otner ¢ e; were successfully treated the same way. Encouraged. Edwards _ sailed for Europe. He offered his anes- thesia toethe French and British governments. He was treated as a patent medicine fakir. Even the American hospital at Neuilly turned him down. Sympathetic Americans in London and Paris helped him with money. He start- ed. a producing laboratory in England and sent Nikalgin free to the hospitals. A few surgeons tried it and asked for more. Finally a famous Japanese bac- teriologist in a Paris hospital i) ~!soldier whose dun. Nikalgin was used on a poor whole front had out with German flaming fire. Excrueiating pain prevented dressinz the wounds. The bandages were saturated with Nikalgin and painlessly removed. The surgeons regarded this as a iniraele. Now Nikalgin been burned Edwards cannot make st enough, Thousands are used monthly in Lives have been savec because surgeons have been cn- abled to treat wounds otheewise’ too painful to be dressed. E}- wards and his supporters forsee a new era—THE PAINLESS .ER.A. The man who first gate Ed- wards a chance at the Vander- bilt clinic is Dr. John C, Vaughn now on the surgical staff at Bell- evue Hospital. “T remember Edwards well,”’ said Dr. Vaughan today. ‘His solution is not new. It is quinine urea. But too much credit can- not be given Edwards for re-dis- covering this forgotten anesthet- ie and applying it for the first time to open wounds. “*Quinine-urea, or nikalgin, is a remarkable compound. It is both an anesthetic and an antiseptic. It both eliminates pain and heals the wound. “(Edwards deserves the thanks of all suffering humanity, and es- pecially of the wounded soldiers of the allied armies.” Mandan News Bureau Cermak in Hespital—Joseph Cer-, ill at the home of his aunt, Mrs. Frank mak was entered at the city hospital] Howe ia Great Falls, Montana. yesterday as a medical patient. Sister. in Hospita .—Miss Hazel Brostorm, sister of Codnty Surveyor Mrs. Finnegan and baby went to Great Falls for an extended visit with her sister and soon after her arrival the baby took ill, Mr. Finnegan was Griffin, was taken to the hospital ye8-| caned to Great Falls Friday night. terday for a few days’ treatment. Devine to Fargo.—Supt J. M. De-| daughter ‘Medical of Patient—Constantine, Mr. and Mrs. Frank vine went to Fargo and Jamestown| Fischer, wes entered at the hospital yesterday on official business in the yesterday as a medical patient. interest of the state reform school. Attend Normal School.—Misses Ag- Autoed to Fort.—Mrs. Rose Sadek, daughter Mary, and Mrs. A. J. Du- fresne and sons Elmer and Joseph, nes Day and Gladys Price left yester-| autoed’ to ‘Bismarck and from there day morning. for Valley City, where, to the penitentiary and Fork Lincoln they have.become enrolled as students, in the Valley City Normal school. Baby Girl—Mr. and Mrs. Peter Meier of St. Anthony, are the proud parents of a baby girl born to them Sunday evening at their farm home. Mother and daughter are doing nicel. Underwent Operation.—Teddie, son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Gjernes, under- went an operation at the city hospital the fore part of the week for appen- dicitis. At last reports Teddie is do- ing nicely. New 8tenographer.—Miss May Gardner of ‘Minneapolis has accepted a position as stenographer at the, Eingenheimer Mercantile Co. to suc- ceed Miss Fay Grunewald, who re- signed recently. Resigned Position John Moss- brucker resigned his position yester- day morning at the car shops and left yesterday afternoon for the Moss- brucker farm near New Salem, where he will make his future home. Caddell! a Corporal—James Smith of the N. P. dining room at the Nor- he received a card from Con Caddell informing him that he had been ap- pointed corporal of the battery com- pany to which he had been assigned. Wedding Yesterday——Miss Eva Schoenlein and Dave Rober were unit- ed in marriage yesterday morning at nuptial high mass by the Reverend Clement. Only intimate friends and relatives were present at the wed: ding. Mr. Rober is a popular young brakeman employed by the Northern thorn Pacific depot, stated today that) Pacific Railway company. * Finseqan Baby Ill.—Friends of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Finnegan will regret to hear that Robert, three-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Finnegan is critically yesterday and returned home last evening. The Sadek family who are guests of the A. J. Dufresne family will return this week to their home near Powers Lake, this state. LEG FRACTURED WHEN CAUGHT IN HAY RAKE. Master Edgar Cooper, aged 11 years, of Moffit, was injured Monday when he fell from the hay rake he was op- erating. His left leg was badly frac- tured and he was brought tg the Bis- marck hospital for treatment. Mas- | ter Edgar is getting along nicely to- day. ———— OF LOCAL INTEREST Some People We Know, and We Will Profit by Hearing About. Them. This is a purely local event. It took. place in Bismarck. Not in some faraway place. You are asked to investigate it. Asked to beliéve a citizen's word; To confirm a citizen's statement. Any article that is endorsed at home Is more worthy of confidence Than one'you know nothing about, Endorsed by unknown people. N. M. Danfot, carpenter, 511 Sev- enth St., Bismarck, says: “Doan’s Kidney Pills rid me.of pains in my back and other symptoms of kidney complaint. I publicly recommended them at that time. I have taken Doan’s Kidney Pills since then and they have done me just as much good as ever.” Price 60c at all dealers. Don’t simply ask for a kidney remedy—get Toan’s Kidney Pills—the same that Mr. Danrot had. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfers., Buffalo, N. Y.