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rn^wn -igl •-.: I 4 \s TELL Trv ..AXEL NELSON'S.. DEPARTMENT STORE CROCERIES, DRY GOODS, NOTIONS, ETC., ETC.. ETC. FARM Machinery, a Very complete Una THE WORLD FAMOUS KENTUCKY SHOE DRILLS. KLEIN'S LAND AGENCY. Washburn, North Dakota TELL YOUR FRIENDS ABOUT IT. THREE NEW RAILWAYS BUILDING. CET REAL ESTATE BARGAINS NOW. ..TAXES PAID FOR N0N-RES1 DENTS.. WE ARC RESPONSIBLE. BEST REFBRBNGES. ...FOR INFORMATION, WRITE TO... KLEIN'S LAND AGENCY. WASHBURN ... NORTH DAKOTA. We will Save You Money When in need of... Lumber of any kind Farmers. A Merchants Lumber Company's NEW YARD at Washburn. We have a fine, clean dry stock of white pine lumber, lath, shingles, which we offer cheap. Also a complete line of sash, doors, cement, lime and other building material. Your trade solicited. Lumber sold on time. BROWN, IManaftor The Right Road TO CHICAGO, KANSAS CITY AND OMAHA FROM SAINT PAUL OR MINNEAPOLIS 4 J. tjREJU v.A .^WESTERN Many trains daily, superbly equipped, making fast time. Through Tourist Cars to California, with choice of routes west pf Omaha or Kansas City. For information write to ft. M. JONK8, TrmotUmg Agmt, Wmrt+ NorHi AM* :J X' *tlr, ALIAS CONTEST NOTICE. Department of the Interior, United States Land Office, Minot, North Dakota, Apr. SI, 1906. .... A sufficient contest affidavit having been filed in this office by Anna Kowarech, contestant against homestead entry Mo. 25938, made Oct. 29, 1903, for nwH Section 22, township 149 n, range 83 w. by Eddie Hall, contestee, in which it is alleged that claimant has wholly aban doned ea.id tract that ho has changed his residence therefrom tor more thou six months since making said entry, that said tract is not settled upon and cultived by said party as re quired by law, and that such now xists: further that said alleged absence from the said land was not due to his employment in the U. S. army, navy or marine corps in time of war. Said parties are hereby notified to appear, re spond and offer evidence touching said allega ta ou at 10 o'clock n. m. on July 2 1906, before Panics T. McCulloch, a notary public at his of fice in Washburn, N- D., (and thr.t final hear ing will he held at IV) o'clock a. ni. on July 9, 1006. before) the register and rec.-iver at the United States land office in Ilinot. N. D. The said contestant haviiif.', in a urnper affi davit filed Atr. 19,1906, set forth facts which show that after due diligence P'T onal service of this notice cannot bo made it i-: hereby or dered ai*d directed that such notice be given by due aud proper publication. 3-11 L,. D. McHsban, Register. CONTEST NOTICE Department of the I nteffior.— United States Lund ©dice.—Devil Lake. N. D.. June 12th, 190S. A sufficient contest affidavit bavins been filed iu this office by Herman Hart, iel, contestant, against Homestead entry sto. 3P42C, in»de Janu ary 2d, 1003, for tho southeast quarter of section 15, township 149, range "9. 'by Martin Lcind, con testee. in which it is alleged that said ontryman as wholly abandoned said 'land for period of more than six months(a:3t past and that said earttiryman has never made-his -residence or built a house thereon or improved said land in any way and that said absence from said land has not'been caused by hfe employment in the army navy or marine corps'®. the United States dur ing the war with Spain or during uny other war in which the IDnited States may be en gaged. Said parties are hereby notified to appear, re spond and offer evidence touching said allega tion at 10 o'clock a. im., on August 4th. 1906, be- 1906, before) the register and receiver of the Unitcd'States land! office in Devils Lake. N. D. The said contestant having,.in a proper affi davit filed Juue 12, 1906. set forth facts that show that after due diligence personal service of this notice cannot be made, it is hereby or dered and directed that such notice be given by due and proper publication. 6-22 Ole Serumgnrd, Register. CONTEST NOTICK Department-of the Interior, United States L/»nd Office, Minot, N. 11., June 11.19C6 A sufficient contest affidavit having been filed in this oflice by Lars ChrKielson, iconteritant, against horaesfcead. entr.v no. 18891, made Oct. 20th, 1902. for swH Sec. '33, Twp, 150, Ran*ce 84, by Steve Bergman, contestee, in which it is al leged that said claimant 'lias wholly abandoned said tract of land for moe than six months, just prior tothe filing of thsscoute*t the fact is he never did reside thereon that said absence was not due to Jiis employment in the U. S. armies or navies during war or otherwise. Said parties are thereby notified to apjpen r. re ti spond and oiler (evidence touching said allega tion at 10 o'clock a. m. on Aug. 31, 1906, before 1 the register and receiver .at the Unite States land office in Minot, N. BL I'of The said contestant having, in a proper aft'i- davit filed May 19,1906. set forth facts which show, that after due 'diligence personal service this notice cannot be 'made, it is hereby or dered and directed that such notice be tfiven by due and proper publication. James Tohnson T. E. Fox. Receiver. Atty. for Contestant. 7-20 CONTEST NOTICE. Department of the Interior, United States Land Office', Minot. North Dakota, June M, 1906. A sufficient contest affidavit having been filed in this office by Henry Solberg, contestant against homestead entry ko. 19292, made Oct. 29,1902, for lieH See. 30, Twp. ISO, Range 85. by William E. Hanson, contestee, in whicn it is al leged that said entryman has not at any time established his residence thereon thet he has not at any time made any improvements there on of any kind that he has not at any time cultivated the same or any part thereof that he has wholly abandoned the same for more than six months last past and tbat said alleged absence from the said land was not due to his employment in the army, navy or marine corps of the United States as a private 9oldier officer, seaman or marine, during the war with Spain or during any other war in-which the U. S. may be engaged. Said parties are hereby notified to appear, re spond and offer evidence touching said allega tion at 10 o'clock a. m. on Sept. 5, 1906, before the register and receiver at the U. S. land office in Minot, N. D. The said contestant having, in a proper affi davit filed June 9, 1606, set forth facts which show that after due diligence, personal, service of this notioe cannot Hbe made, it is hereby or dered and directed that such notice be given by due and proper publication. C. Aurland. Atty. T. B. Fox, Receiver. Minot, M. D. 7-20 As you go through life save a portion of your money, The First National Banl^, of Washburn with its $40,000 capital afcd surplus, a safe depository. (h:tmberln!n's Colic. Cholera and Diart-himo Kcmeriv ll«tti*r Tli .11 Throe i.octors. Three years ago we had three doeiors with our little boy and everything that they could do seemed vain. At last when all hope seemed to be gone we began using Chamberlain's Colic. Cholera and Diarrhoae Remedy and in a few hours he began to improve. To day he is as healthy a child as pa rents could wish for.—Mrs. B. J, Johnston Linton, Miss. For sale by all druggists. Spt cial rates on farm loans— beats all of them. Frank E. Funk 1st. Nat'l Bank Washburn, N. D. Notice to Creditors. In the matter of the estate of William H. Mann, deceased. Notice is hereby given by the uudersigned Joseph Mann, administrator of the estate of William H. Mann, late of the village of Wash burn, in the connty of McMean and state of North Dakota, deceased, to the creditors of, and all persons having claims against, said de ceased, to exhibit them with the necessary vouchers, within fonr months after the first publication of this notice, to said administra tor at his office in the village of Washburn, in said county. Dated this 19th day of June A D. 1906. Joseph Mann, Administrator. M. C. Spiccr, Attorney for Administrator. Underwood, N. D. First publican on the 22d day of June A. D. 1906. SUMMONS. State of North Dakota, county of McLean. In District, Court, Sixth Judicial District. John C. Behlen, Plaintiff. vs. Lonis A. Elilers and Fredrick H. Ehlers, Defendants. SUMMONS. The state of Uorth Dakota to the above named defendant?: You are hereby :stimmoned to answer the com plaint in this action and to serve a copy of your answer upon the subscribers within thirty (30) days after the service of this summons upon you exclusive of the day of service aud in case of your failure appear or answer judgment will be taken against you by default for the relief demanded in the complaint, Dated at Washburn, N, D. this 12th day of May A. D. 1906. Hyland & Nuessle, Attorneys for Plaintiff. Office and pos"' office address, Washburn, N. To the above named defendants: Please take notice that the within summons and complaint in this action has been filed with the clerk of the district court in the county of McLean and state of North Dakota. IIIIII Hyland & Nuessle, Attorneys for Plaintiff, Post office address Washburn, N. Chas. Kaiser of Bismarck Quality of goods and fitting guaranteed Cleaning, -Pressing -and Repairing Represented in Was.ibnrn by b. 8. Beriot at .he Come Aarain Store. 9 MACHINES IN TME NEW DOMESTIC Chain & Lock Stitch A machine en -which every kind of family sswu':g can #e done, is conspkf«iis „r lis uae juallcd -ange of r«rk, case of »pe aiion, simplicity. dur:biiity, «vo. kman ship and geaersl elegance. Made and' sold terovcr 40 .years W. A. PERSEY, Washburn, N. D. Agent, forW.to W and Domestic. For Keiit-:—Fonr miles east of Underwood,as4300 acre farm, 350 «cres broken, 150 acres more to ho •broken, balance pasture, good baildings, wfii with wind mill. etc. "Will reiit witk or without machi nery for one-for five years. Henry Currier, Underwood, N. D. ReadCjT DEADER All the News of the County *#/*. & Now is the TIMEIIII To Subscribe. icy- NEWS OF THE WEEK RUSSIAN INTERNAL SITUATION. A serious mutiny has broken out in '.he groat island fortress of Sveaborg, Finland, which defends the sea ap proaches to Helsingfors. Severe fight ing followed between rebellious and loyal troops in which several hundred men were killed or wounded. Tho mutineers include the artillerymen and the guns of the fortress have re turned the fire of torpedo boats in the harbor. Mutinous sailors, EoldierB, sappers and miners seized Fort Constantino at Cronstadt, but were subsequently dislodged and compelled to surrender after heavy fighting with the loyal regiments. A hundred men were killed and many were wounded, in eluding Admiral Boaklwisneff. Some of the mutineers succeeded in board ing a steamer and escaping to Fin land. In the light of the latest develop ments the general strike in Russia may almost be regarded as a fiasco. The summons to go out has met with some response in Moscow, where the printers and the street car men and part of the employes of the gas, water and electric light plants quit work, but these are more than offset by the defections in St. Petersburg. While Major General of the Gen darmerie Markgrafsky, who was also an aide to the governor general, was driving to his summer villa near Mos cow with his wife, son and daughter, he was killed from ambush. The vol ley fired by the assassins also killed the general's son. The crew of the armored cruiser Pamyat Azova mutined oft the Esth onian coast and are now in full pos session of the ship, which has sailed northward in the direction of the Fin nish gulf. The captain and four offi cers of the cruiser were killed by tho mutineers. ..w The government has practically suc ceeded in crushing the organisation of the strike leaders at St. Petersburg. The central committee of the Social Democrats has been captured and placed in prison and the greatest con fusion prevails in the revolutionary camp. -&.i Mi Herienstein, former member of the outlawed parliament, In which he was a prominent leader of the Con stitutional Democrats, was assas sinated at his country house near Terr» lokl, Finland, by men in the pay of the Black Hundred organization. Pickets of cavalry ahd infantry are the most conspicuous figures on the streets of St. Petersburg. Business houses generally have boarded up their windows, as they did in the great Oc tober strike. Sveaborg fortress is completely in the hands o£ the government. The mutineers have been marched out and sent to Skatiidflen island, where they v.i'.i await trial. Meetings of workmen, which are be in addressed by revolutionary orators, aie being held nightly, in secret, in the Industrial sections o£ St. Peters burg. St. Petersburg is in darkness, the employes of the electric lighting plants having ceased work in obe dience to the call for a general strike. An Incipient mutiny broke out on the Russian cruiser Bogatyr at Hel singfors. It was immediately put down with the arrest of 200 sailors. Train robbers between Libau and HaStpot stole $40,000 of government money. Eight passengers were wound ed in defense of the train. A portion of the troops in the sum oner camp at Rembertoff, Russian Po land. have mutinied and are in open Tevolt. The cruiser Pamyat Azova is again In the hands of the government. The mutineers have been placed under ar Test. FOREIGN NEWS. The Italian steamship Sirio, from Genoa for Barcelona, Cadiz, Monte video and Buenos Ayres, with about 80ft persons on board, was wrecked off the coast of Spain. Three hundred immigrants, most of them Italians and Spaniards, were drowned. The re mainder of the passengers and the officers and crew got away in the ship's boats or were rescued iJy boats from the shore. Strained relations have arisen be tween France and Turkey over the frontier of Tripoli adjacent to the French Sahara. Turkish troops re cently occupied the disputed territory on the ground of Turkey's suzerainty over Tripoli. France's protest was in effective, the Turkish ambassador at Paris receiving instructions to main tain the Turkish claims. A band of Pulajanes made an at tack on Abuygo, twenty miles south of Barauen, island of Leyte, killing the ex-president, three policemen and two other persons and burning the town hall. Serious riots of unemployed persons occurred at Capetown Monday. A mob of white and colored men looted many shops. The police were almost powerless. jprincess Albert, wife of the heir presumptive to the throne of Belgium, has given birth to a daughter. NEW8 FROM WASHINGTON. Provision trusts and combinations In the isthmian canal zone succeeded in increasing the price of meats, vege tables and fruits more than 100 per cent and forced the isthmian canal commission to pass a resolution at a recent meeting enabling its agents to buy supplies in the open maiket find without advertising for bids. til'' I ••'••r -/•.-v- '-y /••i& CONNECTION WITH RAILROADS. Sovernment Investigating Toledo (O.) Ice Companies. Toledo, O., Aug. 15.—Jmlson C. Clements, member of the interstate commerce commission, has be^im. an Inquiry on behalf of the government into the relations between the rail roads entering Toledo and the ice companies shipping over these lines. Forty witnesses have been summone4 and Mr. Clements believes the inves tigation can be completed in two days. Joseph A. .Miller, manager of the Toledo Ice and Coal company and one of the men sentenced to the work house by Judge Kinkade for conspir acy in restraint of trade, was the first witness called by the government. Miller's testimony was to the effect that previous to five years ago, when be became manager of the Ice com pany, he was purchasing agent for the Ann Arbor railroad, but while am agent for the road he had sold Ice for the ice company and was paid by the road "and that Wellington R. Burt, president of the Ann Arbor, and Harry Ashley, general manager( were direc tors of the ice company alftl that prac tically all the stock in the ice com pany was owned by railroad jwople. He further testified that the office of the ice company is located on Ann Arbor road property, but that no rent was paid. Burglars Fire Michigan Village. Berrien Center, Mich., Aug. 15.— After robbing the store of J. A. Ruttei burglars set fire to the building and attempted to destroy the villngo. The village \v:is waved throu a hard worli of a bucket brigade of !n men, who labored for three hours iu fighting the flames. COURT ISSUES INJUNCTION FEDERAL. JUDGE TAKES A HAND IN CONTEST OVER CHICAGO BANK FAILURE. M.- V- Chicago, Aug. IB.—Judge Bethea, In the United States district court, has isBUed a temporary restraining order I prohibiting all Interested parties Ifrom interfering In any way with ifce uH8«ts of the Milwaukee Avenue Co-Oper ative store, the majority .'.if stock of which is owned by Pnss'ittenf. Stems-J land of the Milwaukee &veii\n- State bank. The order was iss,iu«! at the: request of counsel directors of the store, v.v.o maintained that the store was a solvent institu tion aud that it wouM be an injustice^ to throw the busine into cltf of a receiver. The in :iiso contin ued until Thursday -ibi h"aring of a petition asking thai receiver be aj pointed for the store. Another warrant ...".ainst Henry W.' Hering, cashier of the Milwaukee Avenue State bank, c'lirging him with forging a note for $10.(.0=l in the name of Mnrcus S. Kirke' y, has been issued by Judge Kersten. ri'he signed by Kirkeby. warrant was COLLATERAL CANft'dJr SE (Co.mD. Further Evitiferfc'e Of Looting by Pre* ide«t SV nsland. Chicago, Aug. 10.—The belief rthat large amounts of collateral given as security for notes i^ the Milwaukee Avenue State bank iiuve been stolen practically became a certainty when a note for $0,000, known to be genu ine, was found iu I'vjjitiont Stenuland'c house at Byron f.nd Lawndale avenue. Seaich VM\? for the col lateral security it could not be found. The discovery r: .'ncd up a field for almost unlimited nj eculation as to how far the loot'.T proceeded before Stensland disai:. d. If the real estate and other in ihr bank have been stole:', oi' no fo to b» worthless the :o.uit of ruuiey left to pay the depo -,::cr: prob.il.Iy will be reduced to as low as 25 jer cent. The criminal "'cle cf the bank case has been placed in 'lie hands of As sistant State's Attorney Barbour by Mr. Olson, who is about to start for New Hampshire ri a vacation. Mr. Barbour will I:e ieli. in charge of the state's attorney'.* oflice pending the re turn of Mr. Olscu and State's Attorney Healy. Mr. Olson has been informed that P. O. Stensland has large land hold ings in Mexico and that he may bo in the Southern republic now. The in formation came in the shape of a let ter from an tr.quaintancc of Stens land. Mr. Olscn Laid that it wiM take only twenty-four hours to run down the clew. EXPECT8 TO BE RE-ELECTED. Congressman Longworth Not Scared by Labor Opposition. New York, Aug. 15.—Representa tive Nicholas Longworth of Ohio was a visitor at the headquarters of the aational Republican congressional cam paign committee. He deposited $1 as bis contribution to the campaign fund. Mr. Longworth met United States' Senator Foraker «and Representative I Edward If Taylor of Ohio, Chairman I James S. Sherman and others. He said he would leave for Ohio Thurs day or Friday and that Mrs. Long worth would accompany him. Mr. Longworth said he was a candidate for reelection and expected that he would win. He further said: "I know-nothing about the oppoal tlon of the labor interests to me ont Hide what I have read in the patter* tram which I gather that I am on tbl general blacklist, but, for wh*t I doao'Jww.* 1 •f •i i'.Hi •A