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Plows:
COAL
I COAL
New and First-Class in Every Respect.
...MEALS AT ALL HOURS...
Van Brunt & McSharry
Peterson Machine Co.
Economy Disc Harrow.
Steel Lever and Boss Harrow
-^-Diamond Willow and Ash Posts.-*-
THE:
City Meat Harket
Dealers in
All Kinds FRESH and SALT
MEATS
Fish and Game in Season.
SOUTHEY & BAGNELL
A. O. REED
Contractor and Builder
CINCINNATI.
FOR SALE one registered
Short Horn bull five years old
one high grade Short Horn bull,
one year old. For sale cheap if
taken soon. F. W. Macomber
4-tf
A
•m
Washburn, N. D.
r.: 7
GUARANTEED TO GIVE SATISFACTION
Stores at Washburn=UnderwoocUGarrison
The Satterlund Mine is better
fixed than ever for supply
ing the demand.
Farmers can have coal at any time.
City people leave orders at T. J. Haug
berg's Store.
Order Early--/\void the Rush
FRED PFISTER, Mgr.
STAR RESTAURANT
WILLIAM ROST, Proprietor.
COFFINS,
caV^al
GOODS.
WINDOW CLASS
...AND SCREENS*
PICTURE
MOULDING
AND FRAMES
,"• s'r-.Svs
WASHBURN,
[NORTH
DAKOTA.
y*
1
fa.
1
1 I!,, 111'
-V.'
Hi' Sy
HORSES FOUND
Write iis if you have lost any. We have
Records of Hundreds of Estray Horses
unclaimed: yours may be among them.
No ohanre unless we flnd your stock.
State Estray Bureau, Ednore, N. 0.
-V
W.-
W City tellers
RALPH WARD.
ROBINSON, N. I.
The Horses
branded 101 on
right shoulder.
Ranch 22-148
86, McLean Co.,
if
Grade Perclieron
Work Horses for
Sale at all times.
A KEWAItll oT $200 i» ofl'orcd for tli«*
arrent and ••onvteiloii of anyone stealing
ltursr.8 branded I O I
KLEIN BROS.
WASHBURN, N. D,
NATIVE WORK HORSES
I have on sale 20 head of
halter broke native horses
coming 4-years-old, at my
place 1 mile west of Wash
burn. These colts will
make horses that will
weigh from 1200 to 1400
pounds. Also 10 head of
broke work horses. Terms
cash or bankable security.
Horses can be seen any
time. Come early and
get choice of bunch.
AUG. E. JOHNSON.
**W$
r*
The cattle
branded
right hip
as
shown in cut.
The Horses
branded same
on right front
shoulder.
50 YEARS'
EXPERIENCE
TRADE MARKS
DESIGNS
COPYRIGHTS AC.
Anyone tending a sketch and description may
quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an
Invention is prohnbly patentable. Communlcs.
tions strictly confidential. Handbook on 1'atenM
sent free. Oldest aeency for securing patents.
Patents taken through Munn Co. receive
tpecial
nutlet, without charge, in the
Scientific American.
A handsomely Illustrated weekly. largest elr
eolation of any scientific Journal. Terms. $3 a
year i_four months, |L Bold brail newsdealers.
^361
New York
Broadway,
625 St- Washington D.
WILL'S SEEDS
TREES CORN
EAR LY. AR Y. ACC LI MA
TED, 24th ANNUAL CATA
LOG FREE. If you do not re
ceive it regularly, send nqw to
OSCAR. H. WILL CO..
BISMARCK. NORTH TAKOTA
'SiSSSSSSS^
JKBSMS
mi's subscription (o
r, 8
FORCED RHUBARB.
Not Exasting In Its Requirements of
High Quality.
The following process for forcing
faubarb given by a Kansas farmer la
American Agriculturist is well adapted
for securing an early spring crop:
Rhubarb can be forced In a cellar, In
a box, even In the kitchen or in well
or poorly constructed forcing houses.
It Is perhaps most commonly forced in
low double spanned, roughly and
cheaply constructed houses. An exca
vation two to three feet deep may be
made and arched over with a roof of
boards or logs, covered with hay. straw
or fodder and the dirt of the excava
tion thrown over the entire roof. No
pnrtlculnr facilities are necessary for
WJ.U
FOBCED RHUBARB.
ventilation. Unless in a severely cold
winter, the house can be heated by
use of ordinary heating stoves. In
more expensive houses and in case of
extreme cold a system of hot water or
steam heating would undoubtedly be
advisable.
Good, strong two, three or four year
old plants are used in forcing. The
plants to be used are dug in the fall
and, with their adhering soil, left in
the field and covered with enough soil
to prevent drying out. It is best to
leave them there until they have been
frozen through. About January, earlier
or later, as the case may bo, the roots
still retaining their soil are brought
into the forcing honse. They are set
or packed close together on the moist
dirt floor. Moist soil, preferably a rich
one, is filled in about each plant, cov
ering the crown slightly. After they
are once thus packed In they may not
need watering, but the roots and soil
should not be allowed to become dry.
Only strong, vigorous plants will pro
duce the large, thick stalks eighteen to
twenty Inches high. When properly
grown, the forcing house product Is at
tractive, of delicate color, tender and
of excellent flavor. After the plants
have produced this winter crop of
leaves they will have become exhaust
ed and are of little or no value.
Sowing Seeds.
In regard to sowing seeds for an
early start in the spring Country Gen
tleman has the following, among other
things, in the way of useful hints: Sow
some cabbage, cauliflower, beet, onion,
celery and lettuce seeds and string
beans in your hotbed, or, if you have
neglected to make one, sow your seeds
in shallow boxes with some cinders in
the bottom and then filled with light,
lonmy soil. Sow thinly, cover lightly
and pi^t the boxes in a sunny window.
In ease you have hotbeds don't forget
to give them plenty of fresh air on fine
days, and water the seedlings freely.
Continued Use of Silage.
The argument is occasionally made
that the continued use of silage has a
deleterious effect upon the constitution
of the animal. The ground taken is
that the acids affect the digestive func
tions and in time impair the bodily
vigor and productive capacity. To my
knowledge no such claims have ever
been substantiated, and the average
feeder need have no fears in this re
gard.—Professor F. W. Taylor, New
Hampshire.
Convenient Window Boxes.
Many people have to start all their
early plants in the kitchen windows,
and the space is usually rather re
stricted. The cut shows a stand with
a series of boxes, one above another.
w*t*v' **K%t'fe*~
4
!,\
Each box Is
pivoted by
screws through
the side pieces
into the middle
of the ends of
each box. The
boxes can thus
be tilted to
ward the win
dow to get the
NOVEL PLANT STAND. „H
8
gunIight
The next day the stand can be turned
about and the boxes tilted the other
way, as the sun draws the plants to
one side and the other. Pegs (as
shown) hold the boxes in place when
tilted. On cold nights the whole stand
can be removed from the window.—
Farm Journal.
Basic Slag Meal.
Basic slag meal has proved through
out to be a highly efficient phospbatlc
manure at one of the eastern experi
ment stations. Its relative efficiency
has been particularly high where those
plants have been grown which are
helped by liming. This Is doubtless
due in part to the fact that it contains
fur more lime thau tone mc:-.l or flonti.
•. .•-fcjaww.,
J*
EXPERT METHODS.
Plan For Testing the Quality of 8eed
Corn.
Professor Holden, the western corn
expert, has been making the rounds ot
the New England farm and New York
state meetings, as reported in Ameri
can Cultivator. Besides describing liia
method of selecting seed corn, the pro
fessor advances other ideas with re*
gard to New England farm methods.
He advocates growing the cattle feeds
on the farm and Insists that eastern
farmers will grow more dent corn and
that alfalfa will soon be considerably
grown here if farmers will thoroughly
drain the soil to a sufficient depth to
make the soil sweet, thoroughly pul
verize it and make a firm, solid seed
bed, sowing the seed early in August.
Foes to the Corn Field.
Professor Holden told of his own
work among the farmers of the west
by taking them right into their fields
and by personal inspection showing
them how they were farming at a
sacrifice, in that their fields were pro
ducing but a fractional part of what
they might be producing if every hill
were filled and every stalk were pro
ductive. He showed the difference in
the acreage with one, two and three
good ears to a hill and thereby led
up to the conclusion that the great
source of loss in corn production IS
the poor seed which so many farmers
use, either through carelessness or
false economy.
Testing the Corn.
Coming down to the point in hand, he
presented a plan for testing the quali
ty of seed corn by determining its ger
minating power, showing those present
the manner in which he was enabled
to select the good ears and reject the
bad by use of a germinating box, in
which. In separate compartments, sam
pie kernels from different ears were
placed and their germinating
soon determined, the bottom of the box !!!jg"b$„X
being filled
With
Of
moist sawdust, a layer
thin muslin placed thereon and all jf»'d
packed (lown, the kernels then placed
in the different compartments, covered
A SOILING CROP.
Heavy Yields of Green Feed Under
Favorable Conditions.
Thousand headed kale (lirassica o'.er
acea) has
been
grown in the Willa
mette valley for twenty-seven years.
It attracted little attention among Ore
gon dairymen until recent years,
but
Kale is used for table greens, but its
chief use on the Pacific coast Is for
feeding green to dairy cows from Octo
ber to April, for which it is highly
IN A FIELD OF KALE.
prized. If the growth is forced in the
early spring, it can be fed much earlier
than Oct. 1. Kale would probably
be an excellent winter feed also for
hogs and poultry. It does best on well
manured, deep, rich loams and sandy
soils. The only objection to the use of
kale is the ditliculty of getting it out of
the field when the ground is wet and
muddy. For this reason well drained
land should be selected upon which to
plant this crop.
Where the weather is quite cold kale
is not. sufficiently hardy to stand out
during the winter, and its use as a
soiling crop would be limited to the
fall.
Proper Time to Plow Land.
The proper time to plow land is
when it is just moist enough to break
up mellow, neither wet enough to leave
a slick surface where rubbed by the
moldboanl nor dry enough to break up
In large clods, or, as the southern
farmer puts it, when the soil has
good season in it. If continued rain
follows wet plowing, little harm fol
lows, but hot, dry winds would soon
leave only a mass of unmanageable
clods. In spring and midsummer plow
ing particularly It is of the utmost im
portance to run the harrow Immediate
ly after the plow. This prevents the
formation of-clods.—W. J. Spillman.
Cost of Concrete Posts.
It is claimed by one Investigator
that concrete posts can be made for
14 cefits each. It Is explained, how
ever, that tills low cost would be possl
1)1? only wh?n large numbers of posts
arc mini* i-
j. w* i^
"'a &
TJl A
Si-
.S
State of North Dakota, In District Court,
County of McLoan Sixth Judicial Dutriat
Jospehme Kenefick, plaintiff,
VS,
Thomas E. Kenefick. defendant.
SUMMONS
State of North Dakota to the above mmed de
fendant.
You are hereby^
summoned to answer the
plaint in this action, which complaint viD
riled in the office of the clerk of the disti
court in and for the county of McLean, in __
state of North Dakota, in the city of Wash
ban,
in said county, to serve a copy of your anutfir
upon the undersigned, attorneys for plaiatai&
within thirty days after the service of thissiflfc
mons upon you, exclusive of the day of aenriQg
and in case of your failure to appear or wisitr
judgment will be taken agaiiiBt you by {lefavL
for the relief demanded in the complaint.
Dated at Mandan, N. D. this 22(1 day of JdMi
ary,A. D. 1907.
Shaw & Nwliolf,
Attorneys for PlaintE.
Residence and post ollice adarew, JUiukL
N. D. 2-16
Notice «f School aad lastitotioa Laado
lor Hay, Grazing aad Coal Mlaing
Purposes.
The School and Institutions Lauds not jjjt
ready leaned, situated in McLean County tad
State of North Dakota, will be oifered for t&tm
at public auction to the highest bidder at Jjne
Court House in the town of Washburn in rail
county, commencing at 1 o'clock p. m„ oa ftp
day the Atii day of April A. D.1907. A oomidda
list of the lands to be so offered for leane Jriai
been filed with the County Auditor of saM
county for public inspection. All lands will Be
offeredfer nay and grazing purposes up«n tte
following terms towit:
The miniinu'i annual rental is one iiercent
the appraised value, but in no case less
Jo.OO per quarter section. All lands appraised
for less than $10 00 ner acre will be leased
term of live years, and lands appraised at]
per acre or more will be leased for one.
only. The entire amount of the first pea
rent together with a fee of $3.00 for each
year lease and $1.50 for each one year lease
be paid at the time of lersing, and oo a
than one Imlf .section will be included in
one lease.
COAL BEARING LANDS.
All lands known to bear lignite coul and sit
uated in said county will lie oifered for leus
upon the following terms, to-wit:
The minimum rental is ten cunts per ton %r
nil coal mined on the land so leased provides,
that the lessee shall pay at the time of lesuamr
and lit the beginning or each your tItereafterlin
nent of $10.00 for each forty X0»
i, but at the expiration of each year
that the lessee shall pay at the time of leswiMr
and at the beginning or each year tItereafterlin
advance payment of $10.00 for each forty XX»
tract leased, but at the expiratio
he will be givun credit, for such advoucc pay
ment when settlement is made for the t-»nuitjgB
of coal mined during the year, but, no purl
Mich advance payment will be refunded totals!
lessee in case lie mines less coal during tft»
year than said advance payment will oo'
and no part thereof will be applied in payn
for coal mined nt any other tim'e than mi
the year for which the same was paid,
power lessen will also bo required to jiay lit tiin t:
issuing each lease, All coalland leases
... ,. ... I The Hoard of University and School
with another thin piece of muslin, with
more sawdust on top, and again pack
ed down. In due time examination
shows the real germinating value of
the samples from the different ears,
and it is easy to decide which ears to
use for seed and which to reject.
is
now rapidly becoming a very popular
fall and winter soiling crop. It stands
the mild winters west of the Cascade
mountains admirably and is hauled
from the field and fed as needed. It
does not head up like cabbage, and the
name "thousand headed" is given it on
account of the numerous branches the
plants have when given plenty of room.
It Is very much like rape, but the
plants are much taller, and the leaves
are longer and broader. It is claimed
that kale will yield thirty to forty tons
of green feed per acre when grown un
der favorable conditions.
nil!
for a term of livo years settlement
j. .« tJie coal niiiintl to hi! made at the rxruratioB of
year mid at any other time the Jiourd dT
University and School Lands m..y dir-Kt.
1
Lan4b
reserves the right to reject any and aJJ bids.
Dated at liisinarck, North Dakota, this 2StJk
day of January A. o. 1!K)(.
O, I. HUtUiK, 2 1
Commissioner of L'niver-ity and Solion'i Lanfc.
CONTEST NOTIC1S
Department of the Interior,
Uuiled States Laud Oflicu. Bismarck. K. Du,
December II, UtOtt.
A "ufHcicnt contest affidavit having fvon fi&Mi
in this! wllleo by Ax'.'l Peterson contestant
against homestead entry No. liOti'J! made 3b~
vomber iU, I!)02, for nw'.i section .'t2, tnwnsn£
14"), raitjfe 71, by Kward J. O'Moara contested,
in which it is alleged that said Kdward
O'Meara has wholly abandoned and changql
his residence from the said land for more thfiB
six mouths last past that such default- stol
exists said alleged absence not due to liisem
ployment in the army, navy or marine corps
the United States in time of war:
Said part ies are hereby notilied to appear, i»
spond and ofl'er evidence touching said
tion at 10 o'clock a. m. on March 18, IW7, b#»
fore the register and receiver at the U.-S. lanil
otllce at Bismarck, N. I.
The said contestant having, in a proper affi
davit filed Dec. II, 1900, si*t forth facts whkA
show that after due diligence, personal
vice of this notice cannot i)e made, it is hereby
ordered and directed that snch notice be giTOft
by due and proper publication.
M. II. Jewell, Register. 2
A, T. Patterson, Attorney for Contestaut,
Bismarck, North Dakota.
Alias Contest Notice.
Department of the Interior. United States
Laud Ollice, Minot, N.
D.,
Janunry 111,1907.
A salllcient contest nllldavit having been file!!
in this oflice by John N. Murray contestoul,
against desert land entry No. 108, made June 12,
l'JOU. for
n%
nw!.i, iio'ti and
n'A se!i
section
N.
ii,
twp. 149, range 85, by Edmund C. Lewis, qgfk.
he has not constructed any ditches theroon. or
made any improvements in any way whatever
on said land, and that the laud in qucstRw
should come under the homestead entry aa
crops can be raised without irrigation oud fm
the neighborhood of said land good crop- aim
be raised ill ordinary seasons. Said parties life*
hereby notilied to appear, respond aud olltr
evidence touching said allegation at 10 o'clqek
a. in. on March 11,1907. before the Register aXi
Receiver of the United States Land Ollice fa
Minot, N. D.
The said contestant having in a proier ttl#
davit filed Jail. 11, 11*07. set forth facts wbick
show that after due diligence personal sorvfO»
of this notice cannot be made, it is hereby o*
dered and directed thut such notice bo gives
by due aud proper publication.
2-8 T. E. Fox. Receiver.
A I.I AS CONTK "T NOTICK
Department of the Interior.—United StatqB
Laud Ollico, Minot,
•1 Feb. 4th, 1907.
A sulilcient contest adldavit having been fll(]0
in this ollice by Roger Jerome, contestant,
against Homestead entry No. 2fil'.l., made Nut.
lith, 11103, for nwy section 18, township 1SL
range 85, by Ole E. Anderson, C'oiitestee,
which it is alleged that the saiil Olo IC. Ander
son has wholly abandoned the said land aruS
changed his place of residence tliurefroin for A
period of more than six months immediately
proceeding the date of the snid contest aflitur
vit and that said alleged absence from tarn
said land was not due to his employment
tm
the army, navy or marine t.orps of the U.
a prvate soldier, olllccr, seaman or mario*
during the war with Spain or during any other
war in which the U. S., may be or has been en
gaged: said parties are hereby notilied to ai£
pear, respond aud oiler evidence touching s*l8
allegation at 10 o'clock a. m., on Mar. 2iit.h. HKW,
before the Register and Receiver of the Unite#
States Land Ollice in Minot. N. D.
The said contestant having, in a proper aflf
davit filed Feb. !ith, 1U07, set forth foci*
which show that after duo diligence, pcrsousB
service of this notice cannot be made. it. is liety
by ordered and directed that such notice
given by due and proper publication.
2-15 L.
D.
McGahan, Register.
C. 13. Bach, Minot, N. D. attorney fur
coutestiutt
Notice for Publication.
17. S. Land Oflice, Bismarck, N. D. Fct. IJ, ItOT.
Notice is hereby g.ven that tho following
named settler has filed notice of his intention
to make filial cominutcd proof in support of IIJB
claim and that said proof will be made fcofot*
it. Olgelrson, county judge,
Vi'.
at htm
ollice at Washburn. N. D., on May 3, 1!J0#, vie:
John Kiemele,
of Turtle Lake, N.D., H. 12. No. 20825,made DflP.
26. im for the uw'5 of bee. &J. fwp.
145, Rg. 81.
He names the following witnesses to pror»
his continuous residence upon aud cultivation
a a
Uan Kuk, Johannes Keck, Dnvid ScMcjshen
mayer, Jr. and Jacob Mullcr. all of Wushburn,
N M. II. Jewell. Register. 1
NOTI'JK FOB PUBLICATION
N. Duk., K4
U. S. Lanil Ollice, Bismarck,
20.1907.
Notice is hereby given that the folIwrnit
nauicd settler hasliled notice of Ins iuUnMm
to make commuted liunl proof HI support «/r but
claim and that said proof will be niaile £i -for*
Aug. E. Johnson, a U. h. ommissioner.i or the
district of North Dabota, at his otllce Wash
burn. N. Dak., on April 4, li)07, VIZ
Charley Qustafson, of-Wilton. N. Dak., 31. It
No. 30513. dated May 12, l'JKi, for thee'.* of seVj
of section 31. township 145, range HO.
Ho names the following witnesses io prove
his continuous residence upon ami 'Cultivation
of said land, viz:
Gerry B. Sshoarer. of Wilton, N. Dak., and TO
fppi Jonti Rmns and Tom McCor
inick of Washburn, N. Dak.
...l Ai. 11. le-.-.-i i!. Tie :,U«riS%
1
II