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*&• ^U tKrxouaty, and la idmee. v** j^' fe.i ^Svl3f Ht *. Jl4 Tim anna. nm-P ronumamiCT GABBED Bt GEO MtshedFrfday eoanty,. ^Wahpeton, bacrlption: 91.00 tbe county, «f AdMrtiUng. «Inch.. 17 00 4 inch.. 91 00 col.'..' 4 50 BOO Twenty-five per cent. Extra tor Space on iFirst Page. Legal and Land Office Notices published at current rates. Local and Editorial Notices, ten cents per line first Insertion, and live cents each subse quent insertion. Transclent advertisements must be paid for in advance in order to secure insertion. Home advertisements payable monthly. Articles and Letters, brief interesting and pointed, are solicited. Thjb Times is sent to subscribers until an explicit order is received by the Publisher for its discontinuance and all payment of arrearages is made as required by law. Address, Tkk Times, Wahpeton. Dakota. Tbe Columns of The Times are open to all who questu est to tbe people of Richland county, but of desire a candid discussion of questions of inter- course we.do not hold ourselves responsible for a correspondent's opinions. Let the journalist defend the doctrine of the -party which he approves, let him criticise and condem tlie party which he does not approve, re serving always his right to applaud his on or. censure hlg Meads, as the truth may and he will be independent enough for icfamtry.—tOarfleld. FRIDAY, AUG. 22, 1884. ANNOUNCEMENT. Farmers and others should remember that we furnish Tax Times and either the weekly Pioneer. -Press, St. Paul Globe or Minneapolis Tribune for the very low price of two dollars per year,—or The Times in the county for one dollar per yea r, lu advance. This is really a splendid offer, and it is being taken by the farmers very much to their and our satisfaction. We publish no "pat ent" and feel certain that the subscriber gets double for his money by accepting our offer than lie would did wepublish a patent for the same money. ttF" And aside from the above facts, THE Times is the official paper of Richland cotiuty and of the city of Wahpeton, thus making it ab solutely essential to every tax payer, in the county, to say nothing of the above advantages. It is a man's duty to place his money where it will earn to him and his family the greatest and best advantages. would'respectfully reque^my meads in thro«gh Richland county, to vote at the coming election^ for investigation that 1 may be cleared of the odium cast on me by Charles Damerel aiiij! others. J. M. Ruqgles. Faribault, Minnesota, is just completing an&elegant roller rink, 60x160 feet. "Sio -says the Republi can of that splendid little city. Anoka, an old town at the conflu ace of the Mississippi and Rum vers,' on the Fergus Falls branch the Manitoba road, a short dis ce north of Minneapolis, sus a disastrous fire Sunday ing abput two o'clock. Six the very heart of the busi nesspart of the place was laid,in ruins, the loss being placed at $600, 000. Eighty-six buildings were de stroyed, and the insurance amounted to about $300,000. The fire origi nated in the out house of the skat ing rink, and was incendiary. Anoka has fine advantages for a towraind of course the place will at onfee be rebuilt. ieal'rove captured the** as T. St. Paul authoriti a bigamist known McAfee, associated with ^Henry R. Curtice in the notion trade. It seems that McAfee married a young woman in Dublin in 1880, whom he deserted within a year, and soon elopfed from Paris to New York t&a countess, daughter of Com oro Mead of the TJ. S. Navy, %bom he married, the woman hav ing a fortune of $25,000, given her by lier father. From New York the couple came to St. Paul and at the time of McAfee's arrest last week, the money was about spent. The fel low has also traveled under the names of Nagel Murray and Gerald N. Moore. He was arrested at the instance of his first wife's brother from Dublin. The bigamist is in jail and won't talk. The countess lias a kid Ave weeks old, which she perhaps count(es)s to be worth #25,000. v~ A Bustler Gone Hence. Lewis O. Storla, late auditor of Clay county, residing at Moorhead, Minnesota, died of fever last week. Mr. Storla/was born of Norwegian parentage, Alamakee Co. Iowa, 1853 being 31 years of age. He married when but little more: than 20 years ofage, and was serving his second termas auditor of Clay county, hav ing been twice elected by very large majorities had a family of six chil dren and shortly before his death fr-iT'jaut Appointed receiver at the Cfookston la8d office, thus bearing jfZ a Jtiertf6d double honor. It would certainly seem tL wirtiMaeryice. ^is He was a most ex- flian not only among his rt .meu.. His parents' Jttf® ministry at irblch he subse- Elizabeth Sbaw, the widow of the roprietor of the- Merchants hotel, St. Paul, fitiln 1860 found dead Ittrlo^ room in St. Paul last week. "When Mr. Shaw sold the hotel, he had quite a fortune and traveled considerably, dying in New York veiy poor, three years ago. Mrs. Shaw,' however, had two or three hundred dollars in her pocket and a ^mall-bank account. She died, most suddenly of heart disease, alone in her room. The New York Independent (re ligious)of tTie 14th instant published a stupid report of one of its editors who had be^n sent to Buffalo to look up the charges against Cleveland, which, for a fact,was the most galling dose of hog-wash ever perpetrated on an intelligent people by a religious publication, in palliation of its pet candidate's crimes. However, it is now telegraphed from New York that the next issue of this large pamphlet-like paper will denounce Cleveland, thus putting itself in a position more in keeping with its professions—of respectability. The Independent was edited for years by Henry Ward Beecher, is now in its 34th year. Mr. Cleveland has published his letter of acceptance which would fill a little more more than a column in THE TIMES. We read enough of the letter to see there was nothing in it, and have not had time to finish. The democrats have made the big gest botch of this year's work they have ever made. The party is run by. a class of demagogues sailing under the guise of democracy, and another class of dudes calling them selves independents. All upright and honest political principles are lost sight of in its whole career, in a national sense. Of course Carlisle, ^orrison, McDonald, Yoorhes' and others are good enough men. But they should kill off the demagogues The ladies of Valley City are in a row" ove&ttie fact that a number of gentleman "went coatless" at the roller rink there one warm evening lately. They ventilate theiifc ideas Leading newspapers of the country are showing much more enterprise than good sense in the wholesale manner in which they are dealing with the question of cannibalism in the Greely party. Suppose those poor fellows, through the criminal stupidity of officials at Washington, were reduced to starvation, and did retain life by recourse to the re mains of deceased comrads,—what of that? It is nothing more than has been done before and will be done while the world stands. It is a false sentimentalism that in the present case now affects to hold up its hands in holly horror at the idea that seven of the twenty-five arctic explorers were saved by the flesh of those who starved to death. Of what earthly use is a man's dead body. It certainly is not a fit thing for food under any citcumstance, but if it is reasonably fresh, and we presume these were in that terribly cold country, is far ahead of abso lutely nothing when a person is dy ing for want of something to eat. One man should not deliberately kill another for the purpose of prey ing upon his dead body, that would be worse than murder, but if a man die of starvation he would be tbe natural prey of any surviving him, whether justified by a stomach filled with plenty or not, and it is a false sentimentalism that pretends to be shocked at this way of keeping life. Life is decidedly more than the mere ordinarily worthless remains of a dead man, and such use made of it is not cannibalism in the usually accepted-meaning of that term. It is unfortunate that the matter has been made public, and it is absurd for the friends of the deceased to now order their various graves open ed and an investigation, so far as any idea of punishment goes. No court martial should convict the' survivors of a crime and no good t, »4?M- to 187^, was Colfc*.... the lively little Daily Times ,o£ that enterprising city, and so far we think the lady's justifying the gentleman has the better part of the argument, among other obser vations saying: "Who of my lady companions conld have been so unreasonable and ungrateful as to denounce the conduct of gentlemen as unseemly or indeli. cate, who at the rink remove their coats, the better to enable them to assist us who are nov ices, as yet, on rollers?' Now if anyone doubts the wisdom of that lady's observation, just let that person, on a warm evening wearing a heavy coat, tackle a two hundred pound "novice on rollers," and the chances are that, that sensi tive individual will have his or her mind disabused on the question. However, the Wahpeton gentlemen skaters have, so far, worn their coats and assisted the ladies, no matter how warm the weather has been and the small boy keeps the water tank well filled. ?"**•, '::^'V.^rfrtVi'^*'-' "•-v- -«'..-.r'.'.-j: 'w. .-v .H. The^publlcff&a, jfriZfcir ealled^o Ue (XMKthoase la Wkhptrtoa, oa Wwiaeed«r,. S»te«^r 1% .]»L *0*0 o'oloek la lot. the ptnotm nrii|«Wli« li Memtei to npriMnt aUcUand Couair fn tbe BapabWsan Territorial Convention rt PMm pa koUSeptemtwr the nth 1884, called toaomluaU a Delegate to Congress to be voted for IiTno. •ember. The precints of Richland County will be en. titled to representation as follows: Precinct—Votes polled at fldl-No. of delegates election IMS. j*gte v.. ..51.. «....8........ Norway..........IBS.. .-.i. ...7.v. .,".....«7,. 8heyenne .-...4 West End.... 11 Grafton........ .-U.2J .......5 Abercromble ..............4 Dwight 88.. ....5. Moore 68 ...4........ Dan ton.... .SB.......:., ..8„ Dexeter... ,...85 .............8 Belford..... .48... 8,.....». Berlin.... 48 i..,.. 8 Pleasant Valley...58 V. The appointment is made on the basis of the vote at the fall election of 1888, giving to each voting precinct one delegate for each twenty four votes, and each major fraction thereof and one delegate at large. The Central Committee recommend that the precinct caucuses be held on the Saturday pro ceeding said Convention at their usual polling places. Johx Johnston, Secretary'. iMfb .-..8 Fnirmocnt.. 48 -....8 DeVlllo. 88.. 8....:... Brightwood 14 ............9... Park 88 .8... Wahpeton... 889 ...15... H. Miller. Chairman. Milnor Teller:—Politics in Rich land county are certainly assuming an interesting aspect. The Rich land County Agricultural Asssocia tion, a strong organization of the principal farmers in the county is seeking to direct the politics of the county and is going to make trouble. A num ber of politicians, without any par ticular recommendations for politi cal preferment, have from the first ridden the association, and are en deavoring to pose as exponents of the farmer, and denounce with great veliemagce whatever political opposition they may have as merci less rings and cliques. A great hue and cry, at the instigation of a num ber of chronic' kickers, has been raised for the investigation of the county records. Ex-office holders, who again invite the suffrages of the dear people in their behalf, clamor long and loud, charge rotten ness, etc. The county commision ers, not believing in the truthful ness of the charges and not wishing to put the county to an expense of several thousand dollars in a use less investigation refused to order an investigation, unless the parties making the charges would agree to pay all expenses incurred in case the records proved to be all right. This was refused by the agitators, but such a pressure was brought to bear on the commissioners thattliey decided to leave the question for the people to vote on this fall, at the general election. Register Ruggles, in a newspaper letter, urges hie friends to vote f^^ninvestTgation, as lie does not odium to rest longer on° hi$Hj|HfeMgk We do not4ubl»iiflP^BVyits a rebuke to thef^farmers' movement. In fact we hold that the farmers' organization has a perfect right to take up anyquestion whatever that is of importance to its members, and the political affairs of the county are of vital importance to all tax-payers. But bear in mind that the history of all farmers' movements show a flourishing condition for a time, and then a general flattening out. The trouble seems to be that the farmers' organizations, as such, fall into the hands of designing men, men who allow a personal spite or selfish in terest to run away with their better judgement, to the disadvantage of the association. Whether the above is true of the particular organization in question or not, remains in fact, to be seen. There is more supposi tion than established fact in The Teller's remarks but they voice a very general sentiment, one that will grow unless the organization takes particular pains to see to it that good udgment be the ruling feature in every move this body makes. When the organization or anyone in its behalf makes a move,'such move must have tbe merit of impartial dealings and stand solidly for what ever may^be right. Anything short of this will just as assuredly drag the organization into ill repute, and its usefulness to do good is then gone. What we mean is, that this association can no more afford to be lead into injustice toward any measure or man th^n can an indi vidual, and we say it kindly and with no special reference to any man or men. And in the mean time, The Teller will please draw its conclusions a little more mild, es pecially in the beginimi Richland County fray. ig of the Tbe Conventions. The call to elect six county dele gates to the congressional conven tion at Pierre the 17th inst., .has been set to meet at the court house, Wahpeton, Wednesday, September 10th, 1884, and will be seen at the head of this column. It has been suggested that the territorial legis lative convention should be—or at least could be c&upled with the above, and thus save the trouble and expense of a convention especially for that purpose. And on the other hand, we, understand there is a proposition to couple the legislative convention with the county conven tion at a later day, when the farm ers will not be as busy as on the can come of such publication further ljLOth of next month. While it is not than to ajtoblish the dire extremity: to wh^pPiiese poor fellow* were subjected—^and perhaps in the fu ture lead to something wousq onr province to dictate to the cent* ral committee, who are toll men of excellent judgment and ability, it juteiosto nsthatax |he.matter now' 6tanda^^et^r planr woqld ~i&NN| all even!^ keep jiff Qonyentlonji |nd conf ^htion nteiieet8r «epftrate •nd liisfclnob from tf4 Republican county convention. Hifctihe *eput» 3i6an cetati#comtyittft at ttwprop* er time call a ptitely eounty conven tion andi-theh see to It that every precaution is takei*'-for fair pUty.' This is'better for all oohctMedr .we fear there wouid be confasiori shotild anything whatever he naixed With this convention. Of course- the farmers' movement.will have a con vention, when thfere should follow a square toed stand up fight. The Scandal Nailed. Fergus Telegram:—The scandal ous story manufactured and circu lated by a recent publication in the Indianapolis.. Sentinel that Mr. Blaine's marriage was after he had been guilty of base betrayal Of the estimable lady now the mother of his children, and that he was forced to marry, at the muzzle of the shot gun, has brought out hundreds of honest people who are familiar with the circumstances of his marriage, and who offer their assistance as witnesses in prosecuting to the full extent of the law the fabricators of the malicious falsehood. The re membrance of an old resident of Millersburg. Ky., is given in the following special from Richmond, Indiana: Isaac 11. Purnell of this city, who witnessed tbe marriage of James G. Blaine in the little town of Millers burg, the county seat of Bourbon county, Ky., says that if there was ever a breath of a rumor in anyway discreditable to Blaine or his wife he would have heard it in village gossip. Mr. Purnell will be sixty years of age next November. He was born and reared in Millersburg, and -continued to live there until he came to this county, nine years ago. Blaine, he says, taught in a military school at Blue Lick Springs, not far distant from Millersburg, and the president os that school was also the president of the female seminary at MillersBwtt. in which the Stanwood sisterswgPe employed. One of girls married a merchant named^illiam McKim, and the other married Blaine in the parlor of the seminary, which was on the opposite side of the block -in which his parents resided. Like mostvof the other villagers, he was present to witness the ceremony, and the departure of the party in hacks for Paris, or Cyntliians, where they took the cars for their wedding tour. There was nothing has(^ or sub rosa about the marriage, nor did he even hear it intimated that there was'the slightest indiscretion connected witli the courtship. Hence he has not the slightest hesitancy in branding the charges of the Indianapolis Sen tinel as an atrocious slander. Isaa£ R. Purnell's son says that his motP er, Mrs. Purnell, remembers the marriage just as distinctly as his father does, and that Mr. Purnell is correct in every detail. Judge West, the blind orator who placed Mr. Blaine in nomination in Chicago, writes to Col. Hollo way as follows:, Bellefontains, Ohio, Aug. 15. Col. W. R. Holloway—Sir: The atrocious calumny on Mr. Blaine and his family by the Sentinel has this moment been called to my no tice. Beside being the political, I am the personal. friend of Mr. Blaine. I personally and intimate ly know the Rev. J. H. Brown in whose family Mrs. Blaine resided and of whose seminary she was a teacher, in the city of Lexington Mr. Blaine and myself were con temporaneous pedagogues in Ken tucky in 1847 and 1848. If you de sire any assistance in the prosecu tion of the-infamous calumny pub lished by the Sentinel against Mr. Blaine and family, my services are at your disposal. So astrocious a crime merits the execration of man kind, and "a wliip in every honest hand to lash the rascal naked through the world." Truly Yours, W. H. WEST. Dakota. Ansel Simms of Woonsocket fell dead while milking a cow. Anew Masonic lodge was insti tutedin LaMoure last Tuesday even ing- It is claimed that the vein of cbal struck at Yankton is eleven feet thick. The town of Roswell offers $35 to any person who will start a news paper at that point. Charles D. Austin, a Lisbon law yer, is a candidate for the legisla ture from Ransom county. A new Democtatic paper—Bis marck Evening Sentinel—will som be-launched by Wm. Jackson. Miss Nellie Fuller, an elevan-year old' roller Skater, wilFpass through the Northern Pacific country to the coast, giving exhibitions. The Devil's Lake Globe has sus pended. Its proprietors have started the Dunseith Herald, the first journ al in the Turtle mountains. The editor of the Pukwana Press complains that he hadn't time to collect his bills because he has to do all his own work, writing, type set ting, etc. A Turner county justice of the peace, granted a divorce and taxed costs and return fare to Iowa, for a lady applicant-lately. The bar are convulsed over the occurrence. -v H. S'. Harcourt went to Devil's Lake Wednesday to look oyer the Pioneer Press -establishment, which papier he has an Jdea of purchasing. It is the property of Lieut. Creel., Lisbon Star, l$fch Valentine Brusch is sufferring from,lameness caused 1y tope, with, 4 «oW- .at- rope, W vr^tittd Stor, W James nigitt !g ^eirrtarm» Kiipds. "A": This is it pretty fair Dakota pro-c tbe Howell 3hronlf: pounds anali- was caught recently* on tbe fmvof Augusta Beerkoop,-near. Lake Bjrron. Last evening a* man was found ly ing on the Northern Pacific track in anrintoxicated condition. When the policeman put his hand tfn him to take him to the station, he 'said handle me gently, for-1 was rai sed a pet."—[Argus. Fergus Telegram:—Son. Soren Listoe was home from Fargo to-day, but Returned to the Dakota metrop olis at once. By the by, Listoe is becoming very much attached to Fargo. Ifi be about to join the great army of Dakota boomers? A Dakota girl from Fargo, went to New York on a visit, and is now a heroine, owing to having used a revolver with good effect on an ob streperous tramp. The Knight of the Box Car probably did not know she was from Dakota—and loaded* Some sharp fellow got off a good joke on a lot of the lower Jim river papers, by starting the story- that the Hudson ferry-boat had capsized^ After the quill-drivers had all pub lished the statement, the question was asked, how could a flatboat, 18x, 23 feet, be upset in four feet of water? The trial of Trixy Hamilton, for the murder of Frank Skelley, occu pied the attention of the municipal court at Fargo all day yesterday. The evidence showed Miss Hamil ton's innocence, but was damaging to a waiter in the restaurant near the stairway down which Skelley fell. A warrant was sworn but for his arrest. Everyone who has read the bright and sparkling witticisms of Kit Adams wiM&fce surprised to learn that he isipi^ jiil at St. Paul for theft. The Bismarck Tribune, on which he was employed before going to St. Paul to write for the Sunday Herald, says that "whisky must ge been the cause, for when on eriodical sprees he is hardly re sible for what he does." "Vermillion Republican: While passing a gravel bank in Sioux Falls recently, Mr. C. W. Pauline noticed among several large stones thrown out by the workmen, one of peculiar appearance. On closer observation it proved to be the petrified skull of some large animal. Further study and .comparison revealed the fact that it was the skull of a musk ox, an animal now living in the extreme north near the Artie circle. The 16th instant, the owners' of the Bank of Huron banded a sched ule to their assignee, Judge Hannay. It appears that Eastman & Nnce came here late in 1882, and bougl'it the bank, Eastman put $10,000 into it. Nance wa^to do the same when he settled up his banking business in RockFalls, 111. When Nance got settled up he was in debt $8,000 instead of being several thousand dollars ahead, as he expected to be, so he never put a dollar into the Bank of Huron. For nine months prior to the first of June Eastman's health was very poor, and he was out on his farm near Wessington, thirty miles west. Nance had full control of the bank and. in that time used $7,1S4 of the bank's money to pay his Rock Falls indebtedness. This 4ie acknowledged to Eastman when the latter saw the funds gone. Nance gave his personal note for this amount and then retired to his farm. Eastman has turned over everything lie has to the assignee, and to make the depositors safe has even transferred his homestead, farm, stock, implements and all, but his and his wife's clothing. The total due tbe depositors is $6,400. Preston, Kean '& Co_hold $12,000 securities for $5,000 advanced. AH other debts are abundantly secured and Judge Hannay believes he will be able to pay. dollar for dollar. Great sympathy is expressed for Eastman as all believe him a good, honest man, but to have been im posed on by bis partner. Notice. Joseph Kenerson now furnishes' ten barrels of water for $1. 17 Send Money tor American Ex press Co. Money Orders. Receipts given. Money refunded if orders are lost. Sold at all ofllces of the. company. Pay able at 0)500 places. Rates: To $5,5c: 210, 8c $30, lOoj #80,13 f40,15c: $50.80c. .3 K. W. Milbttrit, Agt. Mortgage Sale." Whereas default has: been made in the condi tions of a certain mortgage executed and deliv ered by HERBERT L. McCLUSKEY (single), mortgagor, to F. T. DAY, mortgagee, dated .the. 2d day of June In the year of oar Lord one thous and eight hundred eighty-three ni^d'recorded as a mortgage in tha office of the register of deeds of tbe county ef Richland in-the Territory' of Da kota, on'the 4th day of June A*p. l88& ats o'clock In the afternoon, in book of mart, gages, on page 448, on which there is clslnted to eight ht ortgage be count ii, on ,'tt ock In es, on pr Jue, at tl :'flfty dollars (SG0), and no action or proceeding h|ts been Instituted at law or in equity t,o recover the debt'secured by .said mortgage, or any part thereof. tii)W, therefore, notice is hereby'given thnt by virtue of apo-wer of sale contained In said mort gage, «nd of the statute in*uch case made.and gy ronde'4, tbe said mortgage will be foreclosed, a sale of the mortgaged premises therein de. scribed, which sale will be made at the front door of the court house .In. town of Wahpeton in the' county of Richland and territory of Dakota, at pnbtt^ anction, by the sheriff of said county, or by hls deputy, on Saturday the: sixth dflf of September in the year of our fxird one thousand eight hundre4.eignty-four' at 10 o'clock in the lorenoon, to satisfy the amount which shall-then be due 09 saM mortgage, with tlie interest tbere onrandeostsund expenses oi salerand twenty* Ave dollars tftorwrias sUpulated in said mortgatt in easeorforeclosure,' TbspremlsM described so to.besol^are th" ated in tbe coubiX .. Dakota, «na known descried wt joll^ to-wli The north west qnarter tn «1of PIqvts, Mo tion Ifa vlx t«J" |n to#nship No. 01^ 'hundred apfl tUrty ttyrea LlW]nqrth( mnnaiiHo^.fonrty nine- [40] w**t, «onnu^ng one liandred and sixty-six a^M-lOO aerMaccordWg to «be Unitfd Ctates go^ennwntsurvey thereof. J).t?dJ.lylihrA.D.MW..^ nlS VWQ 'AMortMrrfar MrtgafM. *4 NEW HARDWARE STORE, Over W. D. *3^ _Are Enabled to ^ipplv K'orthern Guarantee .Satisfaction* it» Price and -0-4?* 4** a 1-4, 4 SeherdenrBros. & Shepf^rd (Successor to T- L. AGENT RUNNING LIGHT New Warrior Mowers, Ames' Straw Burning Engines and Separators Casad^ Sulky Plows,Wagons, Hay Rakes, Breakeis, Cros&ing Sewing Machines, Buggies, etc., etc., etc.,. liepairs Constantly on Hand. WAHPETON, DAKOTA —DEALERS IN— ockery, Boots & Shoes, Hats & Caps Hats and Caps, Elour and Feed. fggF^Casli paid for Grain and Fur and all Fafin Produce.' KOTSCHEVAR BROS Sell Cheap for Cash DEALS IN A A I N E A I O I 1 Agent for tlie Empire Twine Binder, Empire Mower, The Everlasting Steel Tooth Harrow, The Best Plow in the MWket^&c foc. invite careful inspection an^ solicit a'ff Q, H. PEREY, A. D09ite Stoves, Tinwani, Farming Tools, Seely & Co's Ware 5^' Work Warranted. Photographing in all Styles, and Enlarging in Water, Ink ^fc Orayo^T^^ Rosencrants, Jtiortg-age Sale. Whereas default has been made in ihe'con ditions of certain mortgage executed and de livered by John Knnppenburg and Nettle Kiiup penburg^hls wlfB, mortgagors, to Qaleb J. Camp, mortgagee, dated the 81st day of November AD 1881, and recorflod as mortgage.in the office of the-register of Deeds of the'- county of Richland and territory of Dakota 011 the 88th day of No vember A D1881 at ft o'clock the afternoon In book of mortgages on pnges 866,867, and 8681 on which there is claimed, to be duo at the date of this notice the sum of one' thousand and two dollars (#1002) and noi'-action or .^proceeding at law or lb-equity has been instituted to recover said debt secured by said moi-tgiigeTor any part thereof. Therefore notice Is horeby.given: That by vir tue of a power of sale contained in,and recorded^ with, said mortgage, and of the statute in such case made and provided, the said iQortgnce will- be foreclosed by a sale of.the mortgaged prem ises described therein, which sale will be -made at the court house, lp the town of Wahpeiton^ in the county of Rlchland.and territory of Dakota, Oy the sheriff-of said county or his deputy,, at publfc auction, ou Saturday, the 80tb day of August, A. D. 1884, at two o'clock In ths af ternoon, to satisfy .the amount lhat may then be dne on said nlortgage, with interest thereon, and costs and expenses of ssld sale, and eighty (Of) dollars attorpey's fees, .as stipulated In" said mortgage in case of foreclosure. The premises are that, said mortgage and so to lie sold, OA.Alt nnMAl A/ .UAt_ AL? northwest quarter and the-west half of tho aouth west quarter of sectioii iiumber thirty-four, township ono hundred and thirty,-six .north, or nunoiM ana Mxty (18Q) nc(«» aeel foyerninentsuiwy Miereof. accordlnBI OHN lOpNSTON,' CAMP. yirtf pubireatlo^, Juiy 29 yarfehD^TM AngWlW Notice is*ereby gteeja^hatthefollowb settlerhasfllMnotlcfiofiiis Jnal entnr t,I VL* V- *a 11 J, A of patronage, s-t ount,Dak. Bank of Walipetoh Deals in GENERAL HARDWARE Foa»ps, Pipe, Carpenters, Tools, and everythlnif Lead nsuaUjr kept in a tlrst-dass hardware store. Walipetoa D.T.,Jan. 18, 1888. lollowlng as Ills witnesses, Vizj vHua-Hentoir. 'iC™,^™.. asmassais.'- JnWahpeton, D.T., 911 nlO" the80|h dayofSeptehlber HORACE AUSTIN," J~ Register: Mortgage S ale. '.j Whereas default has been mAde in tte.odlidi'^: tions of a cprtnin mortgage, executed and dellv ered by ANNA A HINaTOKNTring gor, to E T. AVi-mortgage^ da lay.of Nkvember- tn the-y«ar j.. thofishtfil eight hnnditia eiiKty^twOM as a mortgage in tte blHee df debds of tho county of Richland In the territory? ofDakota.dn lhe 86th day ofNfiVembW'/A.IKfS .1882,'lit: 8 o'clock in the afternoOn, InTbodi Ot $ mortgages, on page!«8, on jvlhchthmls efadUrU 0d-to be due, at the date oT.tW« Bbt|e%ni^ Amount of- thirty-seven d01lar»r37(M}':' action'or.procfedlng has been iasUtueMi^ii« or in equity to recover the-deb't secartd qiortgage, or any patHhereirf'. -vT, N ow, therefore, notice: Is hei^yjrivealtluktt virtue orapowerofsalecantainedlAsaidttir provided,^the ssld mortgage- -will be fMcMOil^ sjleOTthe scribed, which sale will be made at the froat of the court house iu.-the town of Wah tlieconnty of Ktehland ahd at 'gubllc"tf"vctibn, tl». or by his,deputy onBsterday tt#' tept«mberin myearelour. Wd one tjr^oaQ at lfr o'eloe^l 'the^amount Whieh mortftage, with ,thermin^fiid _,»ne .. attorney^ (ees.ao 5^ I? i^tWy °f RIciaad aiHf -:tp-wH!Thesouth east oneonaf" nmtd mftke ttwrwron tha and Bay or octohw 4IUKP«iaiR,'JD:S aarwr^f -,v.p