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r-jl [a tfjl 1$) \Hs Hi \h & Hi 1$ $ lift \£4, Wx- 1 "COAL! COAL! COAL! Anthracite Coal Bituminous Coal FOR SALE. Liu'iiifc Coal Best Quality and Cheapest Price! PHOENIX LUMBER CO., LINTON, N. 0. xmxMmxmxM«M»x»««M*xmx»wx«x*iMmxwx The Farmers' Friend Milling ('Oiiipany Larvik P. O N. D. Our newMiiill i.s now npeo f,,r business. Will t'xcli »n^if Hour fur wheat. tirounri fee'l for sale. Will pay abivc tlie inuili't |,rio! foro|,|i WilKAT. GIVE US A TRIAL. mx«m*xM*x«xmx*x*x*i«mxmx*x»xmx*x*xmx»x CALLOWAY and ABERDEEN ANGUS BULLS. Yearlings and Two-Ycar-Olds. All Subject to Registration. Terms to Suit. At O. O. JOHNSON RANCH. 3.1 Miles East °"-""on J.W.JAMES The Lyon Elevator, Linton, North Dakota, Handles That Reliable, First- Class Article, CLIMAX FLOUR This Flour has held its own against all competition for twenty years. Call and get a sack and you will thereafter have no other. A. R. MGORE, Agent. LIS 'j EE HIT 1 W l| ILK WE TELL YOUTH AT WE 11 A E A iO) I) STOCK OE I. IT J3 E3 A O I 1 E I I BUILDING MATERIAL And we want, t.u ti«un- on your bills, whether they are bin nr little- WHY NOT CUT YOUIt- Window Screens and Screen Doors I ut up .before l.Iio. usti uf wurk begins and everybody is ton busy »o ... (In (tdd jn'.is ib(|Ut the house G00DRIDGE-CALL LUMBER COMPANY, DACOT(IH LUMBER COMPANY, flgents. Hiils Wanted. s-eiileil Kids v.-111 lw receiv-eil In- r.l of i'treclorsof McOully School l»K(. i.-V N V, f-unnoiis county, North ItiitviHii, ui) i• °V, rn*1 ^Muroay, September 'J4. h't ImtUHui 14 Si' lldoi -tl HI sC, I KII (Mil-t|..list's tVu li".''-!1 I?1'.''1! T..»'.,,sli||i i:ci, tv/iiL-e ,i,. tn Kind district. sni,| school-house to in- ::u |IV r,.,.. ..... sili'i'1 "i"slis'. s,'lnol-liousc .1 ii .? i,, ,J i'l W1 lotKlithjn prtTaitla| found the giuo! have a wl,h MuiltlliiK iv I'''1''''u "I''"'1"1 l'y tros|,e,t .if I.!<p></p>I.' obtained liy calling on l'ierk i.V.V!i at Ills residence i.n Sect tun O'M ''UI" """IKI llistlict. I 111 lilds will lit- Duelled nil the liny nnil at I'.' I.'.ur |„.r,Mil in.meil. lit ineeiliVlie I'cl'l In the school-house at, l.urvlk fur !l'sh""'!'SSri,'i 1,1.'UI,'r,vil11 utr. t.. 1 'in iiiiiiiuiii .f ids r.-ilttif 11 lly perforin III.' work 1-1. i."*-' U! Provisions of Ills oonlrii.t. or all l.hU reserves ttie right to rej.-et any c.!'n.."i''i 'i'i V"' "ounl of lireetcirs of SI.- nlly s-liool lilsirlet. Nil /..I'll'J11MAllf'IV ,''1" Ntitifu of Sale of Isanti. Nyii.'e is hereliy V'iveii tlmt, hy virlne.if-i 'ert iiiii eM'i'iiii.in issue)! in me by t)M.clerk- of the disti -t 1-1i.iiii it, aii.l for Krninons enmity "'"."f Niirlt! Da ,nta. I wilt sell M. tlie lilt-fr 1 hi«i»ltT for rash at. tin* fmni »f t|u ••Mirt-houM* in l.lii».on. Kiimtoits t'ountv I -»t 1 'akola. on 'l'iHst|uy, lh» tiav .f MnHiMiiiicr, lnhi, at. ttour of wo o'.-lov'k in llu'aft»M noon of sahi tiny, the following:-«Je srrihiMl roal-properly, 1o-wit: Tin. soulinsiKt iviaru«r (S. R. *4) of St'ftUto 'rhtrty-li'our :U). Township Ou« llundriMl I'lilfty-Si\ north. Hai)X Sevont v-Kiuht i7) wt.*st of thr Kifth IViturlpul Mrridian Said sa)»s Ik»J»k made for th»«. purpose of satlsfylni thut fertain judgment olt:«.ii»-l Uv Ki'lnliolil Mulske s^aiiiMi (J. II. t'raljr for lu' sutn of $»».'» 4T, wllb interest thcroon from tin' :'»Uh »luv *f iK'tobor, at scvi'ti p-r ivni, touviliiT wilU acorui'd and accrulii'L' I'O VIAS. IIKWI I'T. '""I-I '|.-„'I IMslri.-t I lerk. «ts. Datfd this l.'alnlay of August. I'.uo. WILLIAM -lONKs, Sheriff of Kimnoiis County. N. h. Hat at Turner's.— ROOSEVELT AT FRONTIER SHOW His Address at Gheyenoe Is $ '$• $ '& Eipondhii of the West. PIONEER DAYS ARE OVER. & •& T»ll» How H* Workad With Ranch man and tha Prog rets That Hai Baan Mada Sinea Ha Roda tha & & & Plaina—Makaa Plaa For Monumant In Honor of Frederick Remington. Cheyenne, Wyo.t Aug. 27.—When at the close of my hunting trip lu Africti I reacbetl the borders of civilization the first invitation I accepted was this to visit the capital of Wyoming on the day wheu the people of the frontier came together to commemorate their achievements. I was glad it was so, because I have a peculiar feeling for the men ami women of what used to be called the "far west" and especial ly for those of the cattle country. $ ipi For a number of years I lived on a ranch on the I.ittle Missouri, sharing work and play, good fortune and bad fortune, with my neighbors, working on the roundup, serving as delegate from the Little .Missouri roundup dis trict to the Montana Stock Growers' association and even at times acting as a deputy sheriff at tny cud of the county. I count those years as among the most valuable of my life, because noth ing breeds such community of feeling as to work with one's fellow men at their life tasks and to learn to know their feelings by actually sharing them. The man of the west through out the successive stages of western growth has always been one of the two or three most typical figures— indeed, I am tempted to say the most typical figure—in American life, and no man can really understand our country and appreciate what It really Is and what It promises unless he has the fullest anil closest sympathy with the ideals and aspirations of the west. The prime reason for this is to be found In the fact that the westerner Is so good an American. lie Is an American first and foremost. For this la the great lesson, friends, that all of us need to learn and to keep, the les son that It Is unimportant whether a man lives north or south, cast or west, provided he is genuinely and in good faith an American, that he feels every part of the United States as his owit and that he is honestly desirous to up hold the Interests of all other Ameri cans in whatever section of the coun try they may dwell. The Expanding of the West. A hundred years ago, wlien men spoke of the west, they meant the country between the Alleghenies and the Mississippi. Fifty years ago the white man's west took In Minnesota, Iowa and Kansas and then skipped across to California and Oregon. The country of the great plains and the I'ockies, the country in which^yon whom I am now addressing lead your lives and do jour work, has grown up within my own lifetime. I myself saw and took part in the closing years of the pioneer period, and it was my great privilege to work side by side with the pioneers—the ranch men, the miners, the cowpunchers, the mule skinners, the bullwhackers —who actually opened up the country. I have seen the herds and flocks of the cattlemen and sheepmen supplant the game. 1 have seen the fortunate? movement by which the small farm has tended gradually to take the place of the great unfenced ranch. I now travel in every comfort on railways across lands which when I first rode across them were still the home of the Indian and the buffalo, and I find cities where one can obtain not merely comfort, but luxury, in the places where thirty years ago there was not building beyond a log hut or a 'dobe house. The men who did.this work were en gaged in the final/stages of conquer ing the continent, and It was their privilege to do one of the great works of all time, to do their part in the per formance of an epic feat in the his tory of the progress of mankind. I have used the word progress. The west stands for growth, for progress. So must the whole American people stand. A great democracy must be progressive or it'will soon cease to be either great or democratic. No na tion, no state, nonparty, can stand still. It must cither go forward or go back ward, and it becomes useless if it goes backward. Therefore I greet you, men. of the west, and stand for progress, as all' men 'must stand who are pro gressive. The pioneers and their immediate successors won victory only by prov ing that they possessed the great, mas terful qualities which lie at the foun dation of uattonal greatness. There are certain well moaning men of intel lectual cultivation,, but lacking mental and moral robustness, who complain continually that they find American life, and especially the life of those 'American communities emerging from the pioneer stage., crude and without genius or beauty. Genius is a fine thing for a nation.. but character is a still finer thing, and. though beauty is good, strength is an even greater wood. The men who have' made this giv it republic of the west what !t in. a ml .especially the men who' have ttu ned it into a continental coir, moinvealtti, have possessed lu the high est degree alio great virile virtues of strength, courage, energy and un daunted soul unwavering resolution. Their typical leaders, of whom Abra lisr.ii IMIKX)1II. though the most excep tional. wsis the most typical, have pos sessed keen Intelligence and a charac ter not merely strong, but lofty a charm-tor exalted by the fact that great power was accompanied by a nich and lincideterraination to use this great power for the common.good, for Hie .advancement of mankind. Pionuer Days Ovar. 1—jjl£_i'l'neer 'days are overa save in IIUMCTFT (O MIU WLLULULFT* on tbc N. E. of Hection north. Bioid 73 went ot tU1Uu. in said Emmons a lew piaces, and the more complex life of today calls fof a greater va riety of good qualities than was need ed on the frontier. There is need at present to encourage the development of uew abilities which can be brought to high perfection only bv a kind of training useless in pioneer times, but these new qualities can only supple ment and never supplant the old, homely virtues the need fur the spe cial and distinctive pioneer virtues is as great as ever. OR In other words, as our civilization grows older nnd more complex, while it is true that we need new forms of trained ability und need to develop men whose lives are devoted wholly to the pursuit of special objects, it Is yet also true that we need a greater and not a less development of the funda mental frontier virtues. These virtues Include the power of self help, together with the power of joining with others for mutual help and, what is especially important, the feeling of comradeship, of social good fellowship. Any man who had the good fortune to live among the old frontier conditions must in looking back realize how vital was this feeling of general comradeship and social fel lowship. There were good men and bad men In the new communities just as in the old communities, and the conditions on the frontier were such that the qualities of the good and bad alike were rather more strikingly manifest ed than In older communities, but among the men who tried to lead hard working, decent livog there was a feel ing of genuine democracy, which rep resented nn approach to the American ideal which we certainly should do everything in our power to preserve. We did not try to say that men were equal when they were not equal, but we did our best to secure something like an equality of opportunity and an equality of reward for good service, and, moreover, each man expected to be received, and on the whole was re ceived wherever ho went on the foot ing that his merits warranted. Now, so far as possible, these quali ties and the conditions that bring about these qualities should be kept in the great states which are growing out of the old frontier communities. AYe need to strive for the general so cial betterment of the people as a whole and yet to encourage individual liberty and set high reward on individ ual initiative up to the point where they become detrimental to the gen oral welfare. In continually and earnestly striving for this betterment of social and eco nomic conditions in our complex in dustrial civilization we should work in the old frontier spirit of rugged strength aud courage and yet with the old frontier spirit of brotherly com radeship and good will. I do not mean that we should refrain from hating wrong. On the contrary, I would preach fiery wrath against wrong. But I would not preach such wrath against the wrongdoer save in those case3 where his wrongdoing real ly is due to evil moral attributes on his part and not to a wrong or false system, of which he is almost as much the victim as the beneficiary. Sometimes a wrong represents the deliberate wickedness of the wrong doer in which case the remedy is to punish him, but sometimes it repre sents the effects of a false social sys tem, in which case the right course is to alter what is false in the system, lioth principles need to bo kept in view as guides to our conduct, aud it is necessary sometimes to work in ac cordance with one and sometimes in accordance with the other. ltefore ending wish to say a word on something which, believe, should especially interest all men who live in the open country, aud especially all men who during the past thirty years have lived and worked on ranches or have done their life work in the wilder parts of our land, on the great plains or among the mountains. The phase of our national life in which the stockman, the mining pros pector, the frontier farmer and their associates were the chief characters was not only an important, but also a very picturesque phase. Often such a phase passes without any great artist arising to commem orate it. The old time backwoodsman, for instance, the man of the back coun try, who lived lu the eastern forests, through which the waters ran east ward to the Atlantic and westward to the Mississippi, passed away without any painter or sculptor arising who possessed at once both the keenness of vision to see what a vital and pic turesque figure the backwoodsman was and the genius adequately to present that figure. Monument For Remington. The artists who saw the picturesque ncss of the backwoodsman iacked the genius adequately to commemorate it while the artists of real ability unfor tunately had their eyes turned toward Europe and lacked the robust original ity-which the novelist Cooper showed —to see where their chance lay to do great work. Hut in oar generation for our fortune a great artist arose who wai capable of seeing aud of recording the infinite picturesqueness of the life of the plains and the Rockies. Of course I speak of Frederic itemington. lie was one of those Americans who by their achievements distinctly deserved well of America. He worked with pencil, with brush, with chisel, lie was both a painter and a sculptor. Ilis pictures and his few bronzes are equally good. When my own regiment, a typically western regiment, recruited mainly from tin men of the great plains and the mountains, was disbanded at Mon tauk Point, tlie otlicers and enlisted men joined iu giving me Itemington's lironze broncho buster, a gift which I thought peculiarly appropriate, coming from such a body of men. In Remington's pictures ail the most •vivid and characteristic features of the western pioneer life which is just clos ing were set forth, and he has com memorated forever the men of the plains and the mountains as they ac tually were. The cowboy is his favor ite type, but the mining prospector, the frontier farmer, the man who guides ox wagon or mule team, the soldier, the Indian—all appear. Now I wish very much that these men themselves Nonce is uvrcuj lilven turfTpStfWwj1] been filod with the dark of thi« viUlfi tor the vacation of the ftUojr in block w»(J)i in Hunter's first addition to Linton, ana tna wouiu in tneir turn provide a monu ment for the great artist, the sum of whose activities represents such a fea ture of American achievement and. above all, represents the commeiuora tion of some of the most interesting figures that have c\^r appeared on the stage of American life. A slatue should be raided to Rem ington by some really first class art ist. Hers at Cheyenne iu this gather ing many hundreds M' the men have come together who wore them selves typical leaders in and represent atives of the very life which Reming ton so portrayed that it*will always live. I hope that thosw men will join together, arrange the appointment of a committee aud start to raise funds for the erection of such a statue. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. (Serial No. 005.'" '. Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Oflice at IJijjnarck, N.D., August lit, 1010. Notice is hereby given that Rasper Schorr, Of Strasburg, North Dakota, who, on March 29, 1905, made Homestead Hntrv No. 30093, Serial No. 06539. for lots 1, 2, and 3 and northeast quarter of northwost quarter of Section 18, Township 131 north. Range 77 west of the Fifth Principal Meridian, has filed notice of inten tion to make final five-year proof, to establish claim to the land above described, before P. II. Rooks, clerk of the didstrict court, at Linton, North Dakota, on the 30th day of September, 1910. Claimant names as \vitnei s« Peter Masset, of Linton, N. D. Lorenz Masset, of Lintoi, N. D. Peter Munch, of Linton, N. D. Heinrich Steinhauer, of Linton,N.D. —M. H. Jewell, Register. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. (Serial N«. 0713-1.) Department of the Interior, U.S. Land Oflice at Bismarck, N. D.. August 8, 1910. Notice is herebv given that Mathew Wing, Of Linton, North Dakota, who, on August 21, 1905, made Homestead Entry No. 31478, Serial No. 0713-1, for lots 1, 2, 3 and 4 of Section 2, Township 132 north, Range 7G west of the Fifth Principal Meridian, has filed notice of intention to make final five-year uroof to establish claim to the land abwve described, before diaries B. Carley, jadge and ex-ofticio elerk of the county court, at Linton, North Dakota, on the 30th day of September, 1910. Claimant names as witnesses: Leon T. Briggs, of Linton, N.D. Judd Wells, of Linton, N. D. Ed Pitcher, of Omio, N. 1). C. W. Wells, of Omio, N. D. —M. H. Jewell. Register. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. (Serial No. 09939.) Department of the Interior, U.S. Land Oflice at Bismarck,N. D.. July 19, 1910. Notice is hereby givuri that Jens P. No»'d, Of Linton, North Dakota, who, on March 27, 1907, Made Homestead Entry No. 37702, Serial No. 09939, for th»"north half of n«r»bea.st quar ter of Section 8, Township 133 north, Range 77 west of the Fifth Principal Meridian, has tiled notice of intention to make final commuta tion proof, to estahlish claim to the land above described, before Charles B. Carley, judge and ex-otlieio clerk of the eounty court, at Linton, North Dakota, on the 28th day of September, i910. Claimant names as witnesses' Casper Bjelland, of Linton, N. 1). Ed. C. Brooks, of Linton, N. D. George Pettis, of Linton, N. D. W. H. Ross, of Linton, N. D. M. H. Jewell, Register. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. (Serial No. 00(584.) Department of the Interior, U.S. Land Oflice at Bismarck, N.D., July 13, 1910. Notice is herebr given that Andrew M. Elwess, Of Linton, North Dakota, who, on April 2.8, 1905, made Homestead Entry No. 30401, Serial No. OOtib'-l, for th« southeast quarter of Section 30,Township 134 north,Range 74 west of the Fifth Principal Meridian, hrii tiled notice of intention to make final five-year proof to establish claim to the land above described, before P. G. Rooks, clerk of district court, at Linton, North Dakota, nn the 28th day of September, 1910. Claimant names as witnesses: Will Traver, of Linton, N. I). Fred Walker, of Linton. N. 1). F. J. Elwess, of Linton, N i). E. W. Doolittle, of Linton, N. M. II. Jewsll. Register. NOTICE FOR I'UBLH A 1 ION (Serial No. 07159.) Department of the Interior, U.S. Land Oflice at Bismarck, N.D., July 15, 1910. Notice is hereby given that Moses Cornelison, Of Hague. North Dakota, who, on September 2. 1905, made Homestead Entry No. 31551, Serial No. 07]09,for west half of northwest quarter and west half of southwest quarter of Section 33, Township 131 north, Rage 74 west of the Fifth Principal Meridian, has filed notice of inten tion to make final live-.unr proof to establish claim to the'land above described, before P. G. Rooks, c'eik of district court, at I.n,ton. North Dakota, on the 2Mb day uf Sentem ber, 1910. Claimant names as witnesses William Hcih, of lUywc, N. I, Frank Neis. of Hague, N. 1). Bailev Page, of Hamie, N. Ii. Jens Swenson, of Hague, N.I). NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. (Serial No. 03723.) Department of the Interior, U.S. Land Office at Hismarck, N.D., July l'J, 1910. Notice is hereby given that Casper Bjelland, Of Linton, North Dakota, who, on May 28, 190-4. made Homestead En try No. 2801-1, Serial No. 05723, for east half of southeast quarter and south half of northeast quarter of Section 8, Township 133 north, Range 77 west of the Fifth Principal Meri dian, has filed notice of intentin to make final five-year proof, to estab lish claim to the land above de scribed, before Charles B. Carley, judge and ex-officio clerk of the county court, at Linton, North Da kota, on the 28th dav of September, l!M0. Claimant names as witnesses: Mat Niesen, of Linton, N. D. Ed. C. Brooks, of Linton, N. D. John J. Tough, of Linton, N. D. William D. Tough, of Linton, N. D. —M. II. Jewell, Register. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. (Serial No. 0-"vl(i2.) Department of the Interior, U.S. Land Oflice at Bismarck, N.D., July 20, 1910. Notice is hereby given that Sebastian Gefroh. Of Hague. North Dakota, who, on August 22, 190:'., made Homestead Entry No. 25573, Serial No. 05162, for the southwest quarter of south west quarter of Section 1, Township 131 north. Range 74 west of the Fifth Principal Meridian, has filed notice of intention to make final five-year proof to establish claim to the land above described, before P. G. Rooks, clerk of district court, at Linton, N. D., on the 1th day of Oc tober, 1910. Claimant names as witnesses: Markus Gefroh, of Hague, N. D. Joseph Gefroh. of Hague, N. D. Georg Bosch, of Hague, N. 1). Anton Gefroh, of Hague, N.D M. H. Jewell, Register. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. (Serial No. 07070.) Department of the Interior, U.S. Land Oflice at Bismarck, N. I)., July 25, 1910. Notice is hereby given that George S. Nelson, Of Winona, North Dakota, who, on July 20, 1905, made Homestead En try No. 31297, Serial No. 07070, for the southeast quarter of southeast quarter, north half of southeast quarter and southeast quarter of northeast quarter of Section 4, Township 131 north, Range 79 west of the Fifth Principal Meridian has tiled notice of intention to make final five year proof, to establish claim to the land above desribed, before Charles 1!. Carley, judge and ex oflicio.clerk of the county court, at Linton, North Dakota, on the 28th day of September. 1910. Claimant names as witnesses: John Jenner, of Winona, N. I). James K. Nelson, of Winona, N. D. Edward Hoff, of Winona, N. D. Jerry Conley, of Winona, N. D. -M. II. Jewell. Register. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. (Serial No. 07891.) Department of the Interior, U.S. Lund Oflice at Bismarck, N. D,. August 20,1910. Notice is hereby given that Leopold Feiszt, Of Marie, North Dakota, who, on March s, 1900, made Homestead Entry No. 33271. Serial No. 07891, for south half of northeast quarter and north half of southeast quarter of Section 20, Township 133 north, Range 71 west of Fifth Principal Meridian, lias filed notice of inten tion to make final live-year proof, to establish claim to the land above described, before Charles B. Carley. judge ami ex-ollicio clerk of the county court,at Linton,North Dako ta, «n the eleventh day of October, 1910. Claimant names as witnesses: Ignatz Bosch, of Linton, N. D. Wendeiin Burgad, of Marie, N. I). Jacob Kuntz, of Marie, N. D. Sebastian Schlosser, of Marie, N. D. M. II. Jewell, Register. Sale of Land. N'itii'0 heiMiy '.'ivi-n tint in tMiiuieu or iii Hitler maile on ihe Mvonrl ilav of .tune. A. Ii. l!U'i. liy Hie ||.,n. I it:i les 'II. 'arley, l'"' ''"unty court in uid for Iho '•''lit. IV Of KINIM.HV H" M. II. Jewell, Register. ESTRAY CATTLE. Est rayed from Haggards pasture, fifteen miles southwest of Linton, between June 1st and Aug. 7th. four head of cattle, brand* on right hip. Finder will please notifying N. Flegel, Linton, N. I). o. K. M»AiTs^A««t-" Proi" of pSijiai. S. K. Mui •ttRSW Of Norih a Meetings every first and u. t., of cueu uioritli, at ors in jfimU standing iimu-o. C. O SMITH. I»MUO1». i.n tiudor-ii'nod. the aditiini*trsilor of tho :itt* i.f Andii'w Uukcr, into of tin* county of Krnniun^ rn.d Mule of North Ilakota. d \n' Mui Kith (hty of |iii inliif. A. irt Iho county Of ]\iMiioij«. M:it,' North Dakota. olTVr fo' num. and il at private sal., to tin highest I'Vd'l* for cu-di. sn !».}'• t. con Ii nn at ion It, ii.I* of -aw rouritv court, all that, cer tain ot. lir ,,f |!U1(1 «*«'ii l). in I owushi no111n nd red hi ft v tive(l: .o north. |{'in}:e sevi-ntv-si'ven (77) vv««si of the I .rth l'rin*i|i,,l Meridian. Seui.tl i.l.ls 1,1 '.will!,! l, :t.v he left with tile mil .-rMu'iieti ill ins I,hie,-ill l.liiton, N. II.. or «l Ii the n,I. ,- ,.f in, court of Kin- I* enmity, at I,is Oltii-e ill I,int.,n, N.I) m!'r K'"' "!"11 day of September. Ii:il,,i August ::i. II. tiitii ii s— |, II i.Kl.. w. I. N N, Summons •-'one I| I '•'M,.I Iv,.Minns i" mi,.i,,,:, ii ii,siriet. ',7 l"''1"!nl.V". a tla lena Sender, i•'-mv !, "t Andreas ii 1/ in ,! Misiti,,, Hi- u,,ins. .mil ait I'V'-n.'S ,1, I,,.,,«• 1, I., 1 i' n1 Vi 4 !:(..] in |,j. t'om* !:i «n.i -i«-ri -r"' ,T A tha. H. L'at it l.intonHivr I- T. \i v.. ery UM Hel 1-. of e.It'll IliOl.ljj. ., III. visiting standing uiY Mrs. A N. Mrs. Ii. 'i I N I S T, I' I LI A LIS l.l-V CITY IiAlNS]-R A. M. IIKITTS. !'„,|)R, etr Laundry Musket i., Emmons County Abstract A. WEATIIKUMV. onwu E^ComplHt* AliNtrurts uf Town Lots in Etumons ms,t Ranch Lands for Sal»\ Nutarv for American Surety t'ompai -, .1 MM If. V. no I. I I PHYSICIAN AMi si ,uA LINTON', N' tU'J'II {•F'liKi'asej* of iho Kyi i\. .... tion. OHii'i* at Vorlami- r\ I'j, phones: Ulllcv, 4il 2 WILLIAM Ml K.s, ||. United States Cointm-si.: I.INTu.Y NWKTII lnM.- Final Proofs THE HOME BAKERY Next to Petrie's I'liom- 7- Bread, Cakes. Pies. Etc Fresh Baked Daily. GIVE US A CALL. E. O. MICKEL, Omio, North Dal.,, ,, Will Drill Wells from Two 1f Inches in Diameter, AT KKASu ABLE RATES. ALL WORK GUARANTEED TUBULAR S. WELL NINE YEARS' EXPERIKWii SATISFACTION GUARANTKKi Agent for Electric Plow and Tina"* ing Engines FRANCIS JAS/.K' I \K. No. 421 Twelfth St., Bismarck. N.. C. BERTHEAU Watchmaker ana .Jeweler Repairing a Specui Call at the Stone Iiriitr.'S't-o-ii•••,' Linton, North Dakota E. H. HARDT Painting. Decorating, Sign-Painting. i„* l!ol- ,1 iV ., |"s Nol I I, |la. I,.. •|JI«%\\I|. ,) 11 a 111 Will hi- taken A l- 1 N 1 KNTifv, Attorneys r,,r I'laiiMlV, I-inton. N. l. NN ovrvruv (mi.'.,-m',kJ|) Attorney., fnr i'laiiitiff. Union, X. |i. IOV. I OBT1 H.V.TA1IBR, N'tf Carriage-Work. Paper-Hangin All Work Strictly C",iiar.u.-!:iv'•••. Sec lliin About Your W'• hilli: t-d f.euiL' he eonm of Kmrnons and .sl ate ot North i'akota. and #Jeerlhei| as follows. -wit Noll Ii luarteriN \Y. 1 Linton, North Dakota SMITH & IRViNE Undertaking and Embnlmina. Furniture and Caskets. Personal and prompt att.i ,-•!•:«! telephone oriler.s. :i„y ,.s_ rn,.' I."'.' !'"1 i'l'-nnihr'aiiee Linton. N rt,h I.)-i kr 1 60 YEARS' l-XPERIE'-: not Maws DES CoPVRIOH7''.iV Anyon«»enrltng afketrh nnii i' |ti!cklf Mcermm ouroiMin«n f ln?entton Isprobftblf tlon»itnctlf conOdontful. HAHDBOOK •ent free. Oliloit aceney for Patents taken through Mir. $peeialnotice, without cltwrk-o, Sdewifie jmierican. AhanJ§omelf llltmtrst«d A cutallou of any 1.»m HftfJLjo«£Conolentitlo MUNN iatr8UWastinNew 2€,B,o,dwavu^• Vers niontU. 9L Sola Ly Bnnchono*.