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tl $ ii 11011 COO ITT KZCOED* VV W 0« ft* 4 Limtmm, Itrtfe OaUto- HOHtE* PAPOk OF THC CQHSTt Ttefcaowttoi THC L.C6ISLATUKC. B-'fSSefCt, FA i*, 7« IIK- iUsaxi. fc'fii jx-awri irt .34 k^SilKsrt 3WJ» jstuS a wwfc. :ibf SRfij rss& of lit *ir"£: a*- at ichkc iarro^ Jess roadbed. Wist: «-s5j :ae itssi«2f 3sai she cyamu2it ssjKKingt, *ts2Zo? 'n Knetsrvr: wov iS3«d* 4c« lusases*.. Send oBtfcf-t jto ~fkm 6' tbt ts -jr't. vx winds j4 jsaid. its4 if? tkat isx irr-j-Eins f'w- w: fi'ffli isA -kW-^JJUlE. "i«- si«ai-*^k- jcarctrj sshcset sav EI liit joikw.nsg susgi Tb» Szcver b32 ussj ja-s-W ist 33-Eit ijjd lit Sbz~?t Wli rat inter «^nslH- 4acc«it}£tL in zbt wssrtc. Amea&nME? nriS &t 3Ktt:3i2* -IS±-T».I4 t: tc5*r InS in asd bc«j«r .aiJS «*rrf-reaa«- CMMEBH« 1* S£» 7»'.«tn«i. Thf« wa3 nasi and pi-rix~. WT -Kstti*&»ss-«rr to a3L \V» tir "•wi™ Vsaw* j«K afia2 dintrcact as ibi iwaw jtu5 n$Kt biis*, jovJ -oc}d oeitT &> for iit suftf-»ridt prioiir.' ijcg»t so sir ourh •AfHrytcy e. j«.n tat mca&tTi of rn&tr bos'c. Ilsc saauiifit: and rtscreadsss caatttr 3ii i£trjai ifle i4af c^swSilwn is t*vt j»noarjr j^ae^tkm. The Uelaad bill is b- Jaoaw -win zsnen$f.-4 by itriking oct Tlx- pzngTzph zavieT which ajn^i'.mvsri- AJTWRRVJIBCNST coOM V: IABISJWTD Tfat \'Ax »-a* to 47 to sir:let '««. Uivkr ibsi paragraph rev-Aasii *•»'.« nvjifj hart won r.4 Sr« videfv :n many ytar». With lhaj prwskffl is rxi». «nce. the orgiruc Jaw wald bt irntTvdfr^ atvl in da« time a v'ytft could :ak«m '/n the ot-v!Kyn of J^rvhiiriti'yn or !cai 0}0fn. Tht vrnatc has puvA the flam biii. which s» a}out list ime liic c-l :rir] }»]1. A conferenct com mm re wi!! 5x- n«:/r'-ary so makt tht »*f/ billi "}i»c." A measure that in causing much anx ict) i'» Kjimardci-ri senate bill No. 4 I Jii» bill firovidc. tha: not more than one ofTirt- nhall IK- he!'! by the fa rat at the »amc time. Village and ^.-hfX/l officiak are excepted frcrtli the prr/vi^iom of the bill. In the Capita) City there are a number of persons who hold a city and a county office—Ed I'at tcrwm tieing an alderman and a Vounty ionimis*ioner, Aw l'atter-on being •.tate's attorney and alderman, Duncan Mrfiillis la-ing alderman and sheriff, and Mnrdock McKcnzie being alderman and county judge. It ib said that the object of the bill is to prevent the possi bility of Kd I'atterson being elected mayor next April. 'I he bill wa- re ported to the home unfavorably a coupic of days ago—that i\ the majority re port was against it, although a minorisy report in itv favor accompanied the ma jority report. What the outcomc will be i* problematical. There was a hard fight on the measure when it pasted the "Ku an-. A bill in which county auditors v/ere interested received its death wound in the IIOUM: Monday. It required that a!' feet should be covered into ihe county Jreasury by county officers who arc on a -salary batik. I he auditors in countk-j like Emmom and Kidder get a few hundred dollar'. !ev% than the treasurer. I he auditor's feet allow him about the •ame turn for his work a% the treasurer sm a«—\'i it it ».aid—the auditor bai •be harder j«A in the matter of work, it would have Hardly bterj right to tut hi HI to a iwn considerably k-vi than the •readorer gett. "Jbe h'/un- so thought, and ov to indefinitely postpone ihe SAW. A bill liai been introduced the fi'/iiwr for the repeal of the present herd law, which allowt nork to run at large during the month* of December, Janu ary, February and .March, but «hii is really a county-option law, a* the com miviioners may order vote at any gen eral (.-lection on the question as to whether or not the said law should If made inoperative in the county wherein the vote is taken. I liree counties voted on the law at the last election and set it aside. It is probable that the bill re pealing the law will pass. Ii. S ftcrvlc* Pension. I he present congress has added to its record of important legislation by pass ing an act to pension any soldier over years of age who served ninety days in the civil war, or sixty days in the Mexican war, in the United States army. I his law will :t|*f»ly at once to all Mexican soldiers, and nearly all the surviving Union soldiers, fjr a man of •-'ft when the civil war closed is now ARI" ab'iie i" these cases gives a claim to a pension of $1J month at W years of age, $15 a month at 70 year, and $-' a month at 7" years and over Pensioners now receiving less than this allowance can get it increased otj appli-1 "''y"'1 are not affected by the new law. Claims for special disabilities may be prosecuted as before. This act sweeps away an immense amount of redtape and delays, often run ning into years, to which applicants for pensions have been subjected. It can he taken for granted that a veteran past the age of ti'2 is unfit for manual labor, and many of the tncdical exami nations carried on have long been super flotis IVmioners are dying at the rate f.t 4'»,fXt a year, and the mor iMJ J'iuir IUIIUS increasing. Only U'W lW*a»ld Mnvivori, remain of the **», Wb'ull i\,1'ifty-iiiuC year* ago. It doubtful if the payments next year will materially ex ceed those of 1006. Service pensWns for the soldiers have not come a ,\:iv too SOOI1. ABOUND THE «TATC- 4 L. E. ESsi&fl, TC'TKT, n*K. with a xt-rr peialal aMidteL tbe crter dtr Wife boiiia? a J*r*e A« of tin at Ikt Pi—r raw- bes£* aafled c« the eeCinff of f&op, tfusT the fire, tbe tia mp&eti *nd fell, tb» sharp e&ge I t-r.-^r K* £*ra4 ©a tie efeis, caaia# as "cXi y»»3s Five rtilcbss wese istse is est sj&d it *10 be srv«?aJ 4lfcTs itr K\££a4 *HI tf i.£»*6r lo X*-ir EjW-l-fvrd Traascrspa: A- B. Owey is feeiIBE prei'y happy tii« H-e is oct tit beiri of a •enai« ia Eaglaad, and feas rtt&sTrtA *ord tisai tb«- matier lias ser£j&& ia tbe coans o* Usat txna try uid tb» s&jtr* isC'dag to biffi Is This si*• litiie buach ol jsxatsj *"2 j3" Al is lis taoospollttie citsi, H3f& rr.ar-y frifTiiS at bis rood fcfnan^*. A: 5xt&r*, liw corootr's jtur *si up us ibe sfjart room, noestly, a bis of jflaster fell !rcjm Ose exsime sgsare cpwn tht bead o{ C'/at* Jcdgt Leanty. The bkrw alaKngi lrwT€r hjnj Ujrou^a U»r seat ud nc«3HS!taj11y stomsed hint, bft Ejd«s jxtakisg bis head nearly raw. He was tbt only ace IJS range, Repre Bestst-ire Storey harisi? jast taoTed to zao'.htrr teal As f^idesnlc of black measles is re ported 3o be rapine at Ellendale. J. Le*is, a ststdect of the state school, frorii CogsveH, di-d from the disease on SaEday night atd'MoEday ifilo Parks, arphw ol Coanty Auditor Ey gzliTrji, vat n'-ir death's door from a complication of measles and pneu monia. The physicians have the case« in hand and arc- doing all they can to stay the progress of the disease. o, Ashley Tribune: Arthur M. Farley has brought suit against the Soo, al leging that a loss ol I2&S.S9, owing to decline of the market, resulted from the company's delay of twenty-one hours in trani porting several car-loads of cattle belonging to A. M. Farley, J. E. Johnson, R. L. Linn, L. Rublin, John Gelszler and L. Milen, to the Twin Cities in October, J£KM. In addition to the I2S&.SS lost by the decline in the market, penalties in the sum of $945 for the delay, are demanded. The Anamoose Progress says: The little child of Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Har ris met with a serious accident last Friday afternoon. While going down the stairs it accidentally slipped and fell to the bottom, striking a nail that m-as sticking up from a block left at the bottom of the stairway with is forehead, the nail entering Its head an inch or more. They summoned medical aid and later brought the child to town. Although the wound is a very serious one, the child is do ing well arid apparently recovering. It is reported that Veterinarian Taylor recently examined horses at Buxton and at one farm found twenty three out of twenty-five animals in fected with glanders. The disease has also shown itself east of Hillsboro. The St. Patrick's Catholic church at Dickinson was partially destroyed by fire Saturday evening, February 2. An over-heated furnace is (supposed to have been the cause. The fire was con fin -d to the basement, but did con siderable damage by smoke and water In the auditorium. The loss is vari ously «-stJmated at from *2,000 to 13, WO. An echo of the railroad wreck at Enderlln on the Koo comes in a dis patch from Wat« rford, Ireland, stating that on Jan. ]ftb, the body of Lord lie lave) Jieresford, who was killed In the railroad wreck at Enderlln, N. D., Dec. 23d, was interred in the family vault lu Clonegan graveyard, Carragh more, aud in liie presence of a large gathering, Lord Charles I'eresford, who wais uuable to reach home from the Mediterranean, will arrive in Ire laud next wi-c-k and proceed to the L'nited States to attend to his broth er's affairs before assuming command of the British channel fleet in March. Citation. In County Court, Kinmoiis County, North Dakota. '|i( matter of the estate of Caroline l. Smith, deceased. Robert Weber, Petitioner, vs. Harvey S. Bedell, Samuel Day Smith, Joseph M. Smith, Addison H. Smith, Harriet A. Smith, Carrie Lucy Smith, Reuben H. Smith, Clara Smith Thresher, Sarah Smith Jenks, Robert D. Smith. Charles H. Smith, Henry M. Smith. Allison P. Smith, Arthur J. Smith, Emily Smith rairchild, Addison L. Day, Horace Tay lor Smith, Ada L, Bagg, William Day Smith, First Congregational Church of West Springfield. Massachusetts, Asby ville Cemetery Association of West Springfield, Massachusetts, Mary Greta Smith, Lucy C. Smith, Eliza Smith. Dr. t-i'i ^"M't'h rate, Samuel Hodge, Ellen Day 1 ovejoy, Margaret Emma Merrick (nee Day). Koine City Hospital, the creditors of said deceased, and all other persons interested. Respondents. State of North Dakota to the above r_t'-sl*nd«-nts: iing more cation. Those who are receiving more •I menthC final y"Vv[e noti' zo"' 1 tV of March. 1907, at there-liter •l ''aV. or as soon mere after ,»s counsel can l* heard at SSMiisasa ,1^,lemrta,",ui,^!! Pr'C"in, f" George I. Webb administrator wTt'l lb* will annexed of Caroline r. Smith lie ceased, when and where you and each Of you are hereby cited to appear tetor,. this Court and show cause, if any then fa'd account and final rew,, should not be settled and allowed, said estate assigned to the persons en titled thereto. By the Court. CHARLES B. CARl FY (seal) Judge of Couuty Court W. T. MASON. Attorney °url (1st pub. Feb. 14, 1V07,: W~ If you want to borrow mom on your farm, the Linton State Hmi, will lend it to you. Fred C'Atoa was up fr-as Brv3d-cfc the fore part of the week. Dr. Snrder. of Haz^lJoa. *Ba visi| tor ID Bismarck a day or twoi»t week. Gtwye Knudtson and Bd Coorer were up into tbe G'seaoe n«iehbrr bof^d last week. Messrs. Feisbfio. IVsrth and Mrian 6ei were Braddock country visiv rs Io Bt^narck la*t week. A rcsutxxsiskio local option biii wi.'i be introduced in a day or two. Of course it won't p*s&. But there is a Hitse tend men here who feel that the time tscomio? when North Dak» la—like \"ernK"ntt New Hampshire. Soalh Dakota. Iowa and other states —will return to a system that is prac tice! ratlH-r than Utopian, and these members believe that no: a single ses sion should pass without the question of resubmission being brought before the legislature. The prohibition bills that are pass ing through the bouse are something fierce. The trouble is that many of the resubmissionists y/m with the prohibitionists to make the group of prohibition statutes as grotesque and absurd as possible. A bill passed the boose the other day that—as one could judge from the reading—allows a strong man to rob a.weak man of his bottle and then send him to jail for having the bottle in his possession. There is only one point in which the prohibition law is now weak, and that is as follows: It is a well-known fact that alcohol can be extracted from wcrjd. The name "wood alcohol" shows that. One who chc-«s a piece of wood extracts Herefrom a certain amount of intoxicating properties. A biii should be passed—and probably will be pasted—making it a misde meanor for any citizen of North Dako ta to chew a toothpick, for the reason that such chewing causes the system to absorb a cet tain amount of alcohol. D. 15. 8 The Snow Blockade Raised. After being closed more than four weeks, the Linton-McKcnzie branch of the Northern Pacific has at last been opened. After the people living along the line had about made up t^ieir minds that they would have to wait for Old So! to do the work along alput the mid dle of May, the following astonishing dispatch wa- received last Thursday: "Jamestown, Feb. 14.—To Hem. D. R. Strccter, Bismarck: Snowplow outfit just left Jamestown for Linton branch, and hopes to get a- far a- Hazeiton to morrow. A. M. BURT." Hell, this time it wa= true, and the plow came as promised and went to work, was a couple of days, how ever, before the outfit reached Hazelton, and a day or so later it reached Linton. The first train from Hazelton reached Bismarck Sunday. By persistent protests and requests by Emmons county people in Bismarck the N. P. people were finally induced to tackle the Linton branch before they had completed the work of opening the line southwest from Ca=selton, which is not yet open. It i? to l»e hoped that there will be no more blockades tiiis winter, as we have had our share of trouble out this way. However, it is likely that a good supply of fuel will be rushed in while the road-, are open, as it i- not yet too late in the winter for the roads to he again dosed. Trfek* or the Trpr». A laughable error occurred In one of the large publishing bouses a number Of years ago. A poet had sent In a manuscript in which was the line, "See the pala martyr In a sheet of fire." The reputation of the writer was nearly mined when the work came out with the line, "See the pale martyr with bis shirt on fire." When favorite speaker rose and was greeted with thunderous applause his party paper came out and said. "The vast concourse rent the air with their snouts." Tke CaoIda* Fa*4. There is no reason iu the world why men, whet her average men or men of genius, should despise the cooking of their food. They never show, or are required to show, the same contempt toward any other art, and on no other la their mental calm more completely dependent. An ill fitting coat is a worry, but not such worry as dinners perpetually ill dressed. To many men, •nd especially to incu whose work is sedentary or whose brains are fully taxed, food which is at once light and nourishing is au absolute necessity if they are to exert their highest powers, and food of that kind is obtaiuahle only by cure In selecting meats aud good cooking when they arc selected. A man should not think too much of his dinner or devote too much time to preparation for It or enjoy it too visi bly when it has arrived, for all those are auiuial peculiarities. But to re main content with Imd food, when :i little more thought or CM refill UT's-S or criticism would procure It in a state lit to be eaten, is only what Scotcnmeu used to describe as "n wasting of the malreics."— London H|tectator. kivrfil All%lre. A number of railway uicu were once discussing Ihe |ii«stlou of accidents. "The roads in Scotland," said one of ficial, "ttHvd to have bad name, in deed, ill respect to acciueuts. No ouc thought of embarking on a railway Journey unless he had provided him self wl.th an accident policy of insur ance. "The famous Dr. Norman Macleod was once about to set off on a long Journey through the Scotch country. Just as the train was pulling out the clergyman's servant pat his head In through the window and said: 'Ha'e yo ta'en -an Insurance ticket, sir?1 'I have,' replied the doctor. 'Then,' continued the servant, -write J?w ume on It and gl'e It to me. ba'e an awfu' habit o' rabbin' the £*pics on this line.'" New York Tines. LOOK TO THE FUTURE. And Da Net U*t the Past Spoil th« Day* That A.-e ta Cmn. TiK-re is nothing more depressing than dw«4Kag upon lost opportunities a misspent life. Whatever your past has te«n. forget it. If It throw! I shadow upon the present or causes metenebolr or ie~pondency. there Is nothing la it trhich helps you, there !s ti-jt a siasle reason why you should retain it in yur memory, and there are a thousand reasons why yon should I bury it- The famre's your uncut block Of taart'le. Beteare how you smite It. Ioii't t.TCch it without a programme, Don't strike a b! -^v with your chisel without a model, lest you ruin and mar forerer the anael which lives within the But the past marble, which ,ii have caned Into hideous images which hav warped and twist ed the ideal* of y-. ir «ii»i and caused you indnite iain. n*esl !!.•• uin or mar the uncut l-i-x-fc i^efore you. This is one of the merciful provisions that every day present to every human be ing. uo matter hovr unfortunate his past, a new uncut hloek of pure mar ble. so that '-very day every human be in? has a new chance to retrieve the past, to improve upon it if be will. Nothing i« more foolish, more posi tively wicked, than to drag the skele tons of the |:*st. the hideous images, the foolish ileeds. the unfortunate ex I^riences of the past into today's work mar and spo:l it. There are plenty of people «ii-i have been failures up to the present moment who could do wonders in the future if they could only foraet the oast and start anew.— Success A SOCIABLE COMPANION. The Chatty Traveler Who Charmed Raiph Waldo Emerson. It is relate! that Ralph Waldo Em erson v.-as once on bis way to Califor nia when be VI joined by a man who was altogether so sociable and chatty that an otherwise tedious Journey was rendered quite cheerful. This man's name was Sackett, and be told Mr. Emerson that be resided In San Fran cisco. Mr. Sackett indicated all the points of interest along the way, re lated a lot of amusing anecdotes and, best of all. was also an attentive lis tener. The i-onsequence was that Mr. Et^erson came to the conclusion that Mr. Sackeu was as charming a man asAe bad ever met, and it was In this pofitfve conviction that he accepted Mr. Sackett's invitation to dine with him immediately upon their arrival in San Francisco. The next morning Mr. Emerson was astonished and annoyed to find iu all the local papers this startling personal notice: "Professor Ralph Waldo Emerson, the eminent philosopher, scholar and poet, is in our city as the guest of J. Sackett, the weU known proprietor of the Bush StdPet Dime museum. Matinees every half hour. Admission only 10 cents. The double headed calf and the dog faced boy this week!" Helping an Invalid. j| trained nurse mentions as among the little things that help make an In valid feel comfortable and rested the frequent brushing of the hair and bath ing of the hands-and face. "I don't know what It is, whether these actions Just divert the Invalid's mind or really do effect some physical change for the better, but they certainly help the sick one to get through the day. Eau de cologne and the various toilet waters are very refreshing when added to the water or used independently. I once heard a man say that if he couldn't both wash bis hands and face and comb his hair in the morning when be got up be would choose to comb his hair. It would wake him up better. He felt something of the same sense of physical comfort as the average convalescent or invalid." Carlyls. Thomas Carlyle, "the sage of Cbel sea," died without winuing much per sonal popularity, a fact, however, which Is forgotten in admiration of his genius. Carlyle exerted a greater in fluence on British literature during the middle of the nineteenth century and on the religious and political beliefs of his time than possibly any other British writer. He never wrote a line that he did not believe, and In regard to style he certainly bad no superior. From the position of schoolmaster In an obscure village this great Scotsman rose to be a leader in Ihe world of let ters.—London Standard. Disillusioned. "She had played iu amateur theat ricals, you know, and threatened to go on the stage If her parents wouldn't let her man- the duke." "And what did her pareuls do?" "They let her go on the stage, gave the duko a -hcck for a front seat and were not at all surprised when be sail ed back to France ihe next morning." .—Cleveland Plain Dealer. His Favorits. "What Is your favorite recitation?" asked the hostess. '•'Curfew slmll Not Ring Tonight,'" answered Mr. Blyklns, with a prompt ness which was almost defiant. "Why. noluxl.v recites that now." •That's why I like it." His Rsbuks. Small Johiiuy (after the slipiier exer cise)—I'm glad 1 ain't a girl. Mamma Why? Small .lohnn.t—'Cause I'd be ashamed to grow up into a woman and punish little boys like me. A married man thinks be could have saved a lot of money hod he renialued a bachelor, but he couldn't —Chicago Kewa. Notice of Homestead Final Proof. LAKI» orricr. AT BiSMAaca, N. D.» February 1. Noliee Is hereby Riven that the followlng niitni 1 settler lias Hied notice of her inten tion to nmko linal proof In support of her claim, and that said proof wlllh« made be fore Jakob llreltllna. County Judge of Mc intosh County. North Dakota, at Ashley, ou M"r I,8KA£(UNA BAUUEITHEB Under her II. E. No. 1M61. made JulyJJ. I*"/ for the E. of N.W. and E. :Kof J. W. 14, jicc. 8, Twp. IS# K*6. ,J ft. of iifth I. M. She names the following witnesses to prove Ills continuous residence upon and cultiva tion of said land, viz: Christian Meldenger. of Aeelanjt. N. II. Daniel Brandner. of Iceland, N. Jakob Dockter, of Aseland, N. I. A'lntn KetteriluR, of Iceland. N. I) M. II. jpWEM., Register. A 3la» lastitatkMi. The Bismarck Tribane. (Daily and Weekly) will cover the proceedings and gossip of the teeth legislative assembly fully and impartially. Those 1 who have read the Bismarck Tribune reports in the past are assured that the coming session of the legislature will receive still greater attention to the details, the lobby and committee work. It will give a complete synopsis of all measures proposed or pasied. Readers of the Tribune will get all the news. No other paper can or will cover the event so fully. The Tribune, daily, three months, will be sent to any address for |1 weekly, 25 cents. Members can make up their lists, send in the addresses and settle with the business department later on. Advance synopsis of reports from the various state officers and institutions are now being made, and those subscribing now will receive the paper gratis till Jan. 1st. years. Notice of Final Homestead Proof. LASH Orrica AT BISMARCK. S. D.. February 19. 190T. Notice Is hereby riven that the following-i n&med settler has filed notice of his Inten tion to make homestead final proof in sup port of bU claim, and that said proof will be made tnfore L. A. Weatherbv, otted States Commissioner at his office in Linton,X. P.. on March 38.19W, vlt: GEOKGE H. DEXTEH E. No. 1JK33, made September 5, l«e, for ?. of N. E. 4 and X. of S. E. of Sec. 31, Twp. S„ Bee. TO W. of 5th P. M. he names the following witnesses to prove his continuous residence upon and cultiva tion of said land, Tiz. -. Ferdinand Gau. of Linton. X. 1. Budolph y. Tegge, of Linton. X. D. Stephen S. Sullivan of Linton. D. Oswald Xanman. of Linton. IJ. Xotlce is hereby given that the following named settler has filed notice of his inten tion to make commutation final proof In sup port of his claim, and that said proof will be made before L. A. Weatherbv, United States Commissioner, at his office in Linton. X. I., on March88,1907. viz.: PETEB M. VAX SO EST H. E. No. 825M, made December 15, l'.KI.j, for W. of N. W. and W. W of S. W. of Sec. 15. Twp. 130 .V, Bge. 73 V. of 3th I*. M. He names the following witnesses to prove his continuous residence upon and cultiva tion of said land. viz.: Arte Van Vugt. of Hull, X. I. John Jellema, of Hnll, X. D. Fred Droog, of Hull, M. D. John Krumm.of Hull. N. I). & & an- Address, THE TEIBI XE Bismarck, X. D. Call at the Record office and get our prices, and let us show you our sam ples of Job Printing. WTbe First Bank of Linton, Lin ton, N. D.. lias real-estate money to loan on good farm lands, three to live M. H. JEWELL. Renter. Notice of Commutation Final Home* stead Proof. LASI Orric* AT BISMARCK. X. 1). February 19. 1908. i" Xotlce is hereby given that the foliowinit named settler has filed notice of his inu-n tlon to makecommutation final proof in sup port of his claim, and that said proof will be made before L. A. Weatherby. United states Commissioner, at bis office in Linton, D.. on March fX. 1907. vix.: WILLIAM LEWIS I1USABOE H. E. No. awry, made May if, Kr. for E. Vi of ?4 and *. W. f* of S. E. of Twp. 13J X.. Use. T5 W. of 5tb V. M. fie oaxnesthe rolUowing witnesses to prove bis continuous residence upou anrt cultiva tion of said land, vi*: Georjre Volk, of tlague. D. Kranz Volk, of Hague. X. 1. Van Soest, of Uague. N. i. I- loyd Payne, of Uague, N. I. M.Ii: JEWELL. Register. Notice of Final Homestead Proof. LAND OrricE AT BISMARCK, D.. February in. 1907. Xotlce is lierebv given that the following named settler has filed notice of his! inten tion to make homestead final proof in sup port of his claim, and that said proof will be made before L. A. Weatberby, United ftatesCommissioner, at his office in Linton X. D., on March 36. isor. viz: .1 S&DWELL LOGCE "-E- made March 13, 1WJ. for the X. \\. of Section 31. Township 133 X-, of Bange 7# W. of 5th P. M. He names the following witnesses to prove bis continuous residence upon and cultiva tion of said land, viz.: William Jones, of Linton, X. 1). Thomas Jones, ef Linton, X. Ii. Edward Pitcher, of Omio, X. Ii, John J. £hepersky. of Linton, X. It. $}•: $ M. Ii. JEWELL. KegUter. Notice of Commutation Final Home stead Proof. LASD OFFICE AT BISMABCK, X. D.. I February 19. IDO". M. II. JEWELL, Register O. SMITH. DENTIST LINTON. NOlt. DAK. CLINT O. SMITH PHOTOG APHER LINTON, NOR. DAK. 0 ROWERDINK, WATCHMAKER AND JEWELKK. KEPAIRINO A SPECIALTV LINTON. NOR. DAK. DR. W. C. WOLVERTON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON LINTON. NORTH DAKOTA OrricE AT FLAHERTY S PHARMACY. Phones: Office. 4.i Red Itesldence, 40 Blue CIGARS BATH ROOM CITY 11ARBEK SHOP A. M. BRITTss. PROP. Lauudry Basket Leave on Mondays. TUBULAR WELLS. NINE VEAHS' EXPERIENCE. SATISFACTION GliARANTEEll. AGENT FOR GADY Allt COOLED GASO LINE ENGINES. FRANCIS JAs^KOWIAK. No 421 Twelfth Street. Bismarck. D. N. JOHN PETERSON, and Woodworker, HAZELTON NORTH DAKOTA. I hereby respectfully inform the public that I am now nrepared to do work in my line, and will earnestly en deavor to satisfy those who give me their patronage Our Stock #1 Winter is complete, and we can show v.yj l3. this year than ever before *hown in line of Ladies' and Children's Cloaks 1M questionably great, and s« is our .v£-,\ Fur Lined Coaus, Suits and OvtrCoat, f. ft". Goods, Notions and Furnishing »is w.--a quantities and offer vou the latest. Mea qualities and styles. A lar^c DACOTAH LUMBEH (0.1 I N O N E O I I iin» Warm Shoes. Prices lower than f-.-pr y. I S W O E I Linton, N. D. Phone, 31 Main And Has Profited Thereby N O N Offices in Linton and Hazelton Large List of Improved and Unimproved air able Ranches. Prices from $S to $-'•' p-r Give Us a call before you, purchase. Land slm/cit fm charge, whether or not i/nu tan/ Apply to L. Du Heaume, Linton, N. Stage leaves Linton ab a. m. daily for Ha zelton and Braddock Carries passengers be tween Linton, Hazelton and Braddock. Beturn ing, reaches Union at G:30 o'lock p. m. Ky v- •J«« I This Farmer is Rich He Boys His Lumber from the W S E N Linton, North Dakota FOGLE & SKELLENCER CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS LINTON. NORTH DAKOTA Satisfaction Guaranteed. Call and Give iance on Your Work. r:' Livery, Feed and Sale StaWi Wm. Carmieheal, Prop First-Class Rigs, Hoot! Horses, Reasonable Prompt Servic Also Rons a Stage Line Between Linton and Braddock, Through Hazelton. Accommodations First Class. Ratts SI.S0 ar.d $2.00-Per FREE •BUS TO ALL TRAINS J. B. OROWELL, Proprietor LINTON, NORTH DAKOTA E E I E LINTON. NORTH DAKOT-.V: —dralrr ret- General Merchandise Fresh Goods at Fair Prices C2V