Newspaper Page Text
Railroad Time Table. St. Paul, Minneapolis & Mani toba JRaUway. WARREN. W. A. Atwater, Station Agent. Le*re South. Leave North. Passenger, 3.30,p. m. Passenger, 1.25 p. m. freight, 1S.4S p. m. Freight, 11.00 a. m. ARGYLE. Leave South. Leave North. Passenger, 2.57 p. m. Passenger, 2.00 p. m. "Freight, 12.00 m. Freight, 12,00 m, STEPHEN. Henry Lane, Station Agent. Leave South, Leave North, Passenger, 2.3Q p. m, Passenger, 2.30 p. m, freight, 11.20 a, m, Freight, 1,00 p. m. PTHSX^C OFFtCIAI^S, MfcMBKft Of CONJHS3 W. D. Washburn, Minneapolis DISTHIC* COURT, district Judge, O. P. Stearns, Dtiluth, STATS SENATOR, Andrew McCrea, Perham. REPRBSfeNtATttBS. P. G. Cornstock, Muofhead. Burnerd Sanlpson, Crookston. COUNTT OWIC1SRS. Probate Judge, John W, Slee. Register of Deeds, Thos. Cregg. Auditor, O. Taylor. IVeasUrer, J, B, Titus. Khenff, W. T, Lackey. Attorney, A. E. Flint. Uchool Superititetldentj J. M. Brown* Coroner, Wm. Carreae* Burveyor, J, NcUoM COUNTT COMMISSIOfcteB8 1st DistrictA. P. Mclntyre, Warren, fid DistrictF. Keye, Argyta DistrictA. Biamondj Stephen. Religious Notice. Religious services the school house eVery Sunday at 10:30 a mM and at 7:30 p, mi Society. Temperance Society organization meet every Friday evening at the school house: BUSINESS CABM O. TAYLOR COUNTY AUDITOR. Pays Taxes for Non-residents. J. P. Nelson, A rt rr & it EI fteal Estate* Pays Tax&s. JOHN W. SLEE, JtfME OF pROBATjj} Jurisdiction in HOMESTEAD and FINAL PROOF entries! Special attention to locating GOT* grnment and R. R. Lands. A. E. Johnson & Go.) Agents for' RAILROAD LAND. Counselor and Attorney ai Law CROOKSTON, MI&N Orookston Hduse, WM. BOX* Pfopridtcr. Cr'obksitbiij Minnesota: Mtddqrl&rttri for MarshdH C'6Mly P'eoptk bUTHER FURS* JMBJtiftl draining! arid Paper Hanging, Promptly Dorie. BU8IMESS, titRgCTORY: ^MERCHANTS Keje A: D: Verbniieiur fiARtiWARE: Jhri Augustiri: LAND AGENTS: Boloomb & Kevtl. ATTbRNEt: Sebrge W. Holcomb: AftiiibULT.URAL MACHINERY Keye HOTEL Carl Mentsel: iuSTibit dt THE PEACE 6. Barker ftttiieiAJJ AND DRUGS IJr J'. L'aFond SALOONS & kitel 8 Conner: STEPHEN jtfijftbgANT: John Hanna. HOTEL. tfehHis Hugh's: 4'*-'?i ''JA'QJ. i i Local Brevities. Wheat 80 cents. Mosquitoes buzz, Seeding nearly completed. J. C. Craig is busy plastering. Oats are scarcepotatoes ditto. Ask Dodge how the water felt. Strawberries areripein Illinois. Wall paper at the Pioneer Drug store. J. C. Bennewitz was in town yesterday. A number of extra trains passed here Sunday. Col. Allen received afresh supply of dogs last week. J. C. Bennewitz came up from St. Paul Thursday. "Opera" and "Forest Belle" cig^ ars at Feran & Dady's. Re?. J. W. IGepper put ift a busy Sunday in this village* Choice apples, oranges and lem ons at McCrea Brothers. Tascott's enamel paint is kept for for sale by McCrea Bros'. Trees, grass, shrubbery of all kinds lttok bright and green. Mr. Royeni is building a ctWelling house on the weslt side. MrS. Casper $ands and child have been visiting in Watfreil for a few Ji B-Cook sold his fine stallidn for $400 considerably less than it Was worth. Coii Whalen is doing good work on the part of this section that runs through toWn. Wouldn.'t it be a good scheme to have a little fourth of July celebra tion this ydar. W. Mitchell, of the Elk rtiver Itfews passed north Friday, bound for St. Vincent. Mrs: Radcliffe and. Mrs* Williams arehere visiting the Nelsons. They arrived last week Cant. Dixon, of Jno. A. Berky & Co., St. Paul, gazed on &nd tarried in Warren last week. H. Bennewitz has purchased lot 20, adjoining the Mclntyre prop erty, of Frank Smith. Screen doors and windows at Rossmah's. Dead sure thing on the hilarious mosquitoes. Ei F. Mclntyre is about his busi ness again. He was laid up for a day or two with a fit of sickness. Judge Slee is happyhe has his books and all the paraphernalia of his oflficeVahd his seeding is alniost finished. E. F. Mclntyre has had his meat market moved one block further north, and is liow situated opposite McCrea Bros', store. Eight families of new settlers have stopped at this station this week, and are all located within four miles of Warren. A special car containing the pres ident, vice president and board ofj directors of the St. P., M. & M.! railway parsed north this morning IZL. ^MsMMMMSfM M. J. Tyner recently of the Grand Forks division of the St. P. M. & M. railway, but now of the St. Vin cent division, was in town Friday. I. W. Wood of the Pembina Farm is bound to push things. His seed ing is about completed and in some places the grain is up and looking well. The people hereabouts have prof ited by the experience of last wint er, and they have planted a few acres of potatoes iu addition to wheat. Mark Stevens is making arrange ments for a big,dance at the hotel to take place in a few days. Look out for the notice in the next SHEAF. County attorney Flint walks around town smiling "all over". Something, must please him huge ly. It can't be that salary*grab business. Job printing of allkinds can now be done at this office, and we ex pect to get all there is to be done. We Will give good work, good sta tionary and expect fair price for the sJame. Feran & Dady have anew ice box, 9^ feet high, and t|x4 feet on the ground! The O. B. society have rented the top story for a skating rink, while it is suggested that the county commissioners meet in one of the other compartments: they would be sure to keep cool if they did.. :t:My[ That incomparable story-book, the bible, tells us that Esau was a "hairy'' man, Granted) but if the historian who chronicled the above highly important iirfbf matron- had' only seen the men of this vicinity, he would have been paralyzed. The fact is, we must have a barber, and if we could only get as good a man as Braley of Crookston to settle here he would do well. On one of the passenger trains north last week was a little giri on ly nine years old, traveling alone, and enroute from Ottawa, Canada to a point near Battleford, N. W. T., to join her brother. She had come unattended and without com panions, and after reaching Winni peg had fe stage journey of about 900 miles to make before her jour ney would be finished. Have you dropped in MdCfea Bros' new store yet? It is one of the nicest and most convenient in this part of the country and is re splendent With its coat of Tascott's unequalled paint. J. C. and George will hold forth in the new building, and D. S. will execute War-dances for the edification of customers in the old corner store. Just go in, anyway, and get George to explain in his clear and lucid manner the differance between burnt and raw umber. The shoemaker will be here sbon we are to have a furniture store, an Elevator, a public hall, another blacksmith shop, a number bf good substantial dwellings, and some Work is to be do&e on the streets. This is well, and we are glad to be able to place it on record War ren is on a big boom and her streets are daily pictures of active business life. There is one pressing want: a resident physician, and that we will probably have ere long. The Crookston medical gentlemen are prompt courteous and kind in re plying to calls made from this sec tion, and their charges are moder ate, but the distance is great and ten minutes gained will often save a life or alleviate much suffering: WARBEN, MARSHALL COUNTY, MINNESOTA, MAY 18, 1881. $2.00 ER YEAR, I The serviceson Saturday audSun fday were well attended, and consid erable interest was manifested in the church work. Rev. Klepper and Flint are both earnest workers .and are much admired hereabouts. H. C. Putnam informs us that (seeding commenced on the Pembina IFarin in Minnesota on the 25th of JApril. The Red River valley flood fdid not reach their farm by some miles, but the Suake River on which :the Putnam farm is, overflowed its jbanks a little. The Putnam Farm |Co. has some 5,000 acres, of which ^,000 acres are under plow. The jWoodward farm of 4,000 acres yearly adjoins this farm on the jwest, the St. P. &M. R. R. running Ibe^tween. Both the village and Railway station of Warren are on fthe Putnam farm.Uau Claire Free press. I If H. C? Putnam said anything jat all like the above, he must have fbeen a "little "off his base but fwe don't think he did, but we do [think the Free Press editor is badly imixed up. The village site, (an incorporated one) is not on any farm, and its tke Pembina farm that contains 5,000 acres, and there is no such railroad as the St. P. & M. running between anything in these parts, but the St. Paul, Min neapolis & Manitoba railway runs through Warren and has lots of the ^finest lands in the World for sale, not only close -by here, but all along its different divisions. Judge Slee is moving Mclntyrc's meat mar ket. ''X^00u^''_\"\'' Luther Fuitsfa painting the new store of McCrea Bros'. !'"j(' Murry the horse man is an-ay front town on a short business trip. How about"that crossing ovei4 the railroad traek? Is it"to be built? i A Col Aileu seems to hats lost sonjething Ground feed find oats by the pound, bushel,' sack, ton or car load, at McCrea Bros\ Two deaths of children from fever have oc curred during the past week. We were unable to learn the etfact names. Mark Stevens has built the sidewalk, and the crossing is in tolerably good shape Now if Judge Nelson will only do iiKewise all will be well. E. W. Rodman had a sharp fight with a prairie Hre oft Sunday iast. It liadnSacli&d1 out glasses. his hay stack and consumed about half of it, be foi it wi stopped. Johnson & Alien have beeii renovating their store, and have materially added to its general appearance, by classifying and rearranging tHe goods iii sepersite departments. The village sehool opened on Monday with a fair attendance. Miss Brown it the teacher, and at this writing has got things into fine working siiape. Qhite a number' offeliiidre'n are to be enrooled yet. The Minneapolis Tribune of last Sunday, May 15 took our brealh JSWih\ Twetity four pages, all fuli of HEWS, principally concerning the vast milling interests of that giant young cit}'. TTnlifee' the extra editions bt ofctoeV news papers in th-'s1 State) il could all be read with- There area few people left in Marshall county who do not take the SUEAF, but we know that the only thing that hinders them is the idea that they will offend the editor by offering him the paltry sum of two (ipllars for o Valuable farHily journal. Correct we are naturally sensitive about such matters, but fetch in your money, and we will strive to choke down our wrath and receive it in a Kind ly spirit. -f** U, 8..land office at Crookston, Minn., May 16j 1881.. Complaint having been entered at this office by Bazile Gervais against Denis Hugan for abandoning his timber culture entry no 923, dated Feb. lo, 187v), upon the seii" sec. 12, town 15*3} range 48, in Marshall county, Minn., with a view to the cancellation1 of said entry the said parties are herecv summon'e'd to' appear n't this office on the 28th day of June, 1S81,' at 10 o'clock a. m., to respond and furnish testi mony concerning said alleged abandonment: THOf5- C. SiiM'LEiGir, Register: *2o-29 O. C: SLETTE*, Receiver: SUBSCRIBE FOR THE SHEAF %kir 3 do ie* Ytaft THE PI0NEEE DBUGSTORE, Titus & Whitney* Proprietors, Keeps a full line of AND MEDICINES, TOILET ARTICLES, STATION* ERYiVAXNISHES, WALL PAPER, Faints. OilsandVarnishes. FINE TOBACCO AND CIGARS, Pure wines and liquors for medicinal pur poses, A full and extensive line of patent medicines. Physicians' prescriptions careful ly compounded at all hours. TITUS & WHITNEY, FRONT STREET, WARREN. TAKE THEBEST! THE FARM, THE FAMILY, BUSINESS OFFICE. The Farmers' Union and Minneapolis Week ly Tribune is now the leading and the best pa per for the Farm, the Family and the Business Man, published in the Northwest. In size and in quantity and quality of .reading matter, it is without a superior. The NewsiIt is a complete News paper giving All the News from All the World. Its summary of State and Northwestern intelli gence, is particultary full. The Farm.It is a first-class Agricultural Journal.' With the aid of that veteran Agri cultural editor, of Minnesota, Col J. H. Stevens The Farmers' Union and Weekly Tribune is specially adapted to the wants of Farmers in the Northwestern belt. In this repeat it is greatly superior, for practical use, to agricul tural papers published further east and south, and designed for a different latitude, different climate'j different soil and different line of farm products. No farmer in Minnesota, Western Wisconsin* Northern" Iowa, Dakota or Mani- tobaiCan afford to. iie without the leading aeri: l<ttral Joti/hal^ of this Veg'ion.' 1^^A The. Market.Our full, accurate and impar tial reports of Wheat and General Markets, at home and abroadj ilidispensibte to the grain growerj the stock raiser and the business man. Published at Minneapolis the leading city of Minnesota aiid the Northwest, where the.bulk of the Minnesota wheat crop is now marketed and turned into ftcnr, the FarmerR' Union and Tribune has facilities possessed by no other journal for making its market intelligence full and trustworthy." In matters of this kind it is always economy to get the best. The Family.As a weekly yisito'r to t.he home and the fireside, this journal i6 invalu able Its editorials discuss all current ques tions fearlessly and candidly. The home circle Department the young folks department the complete story each week the letter-box, in which everybody's questions are answered and the several pages of interesting and instruc tive, miscellany for readers of all ages are care fully and specially prepared and constitute al most a family library: The FarmeYS' Union and Weekly Tribune is notcrowded with pol tical chaff to the exclusion of more important and more readable uiatten The paper is clean Nothing is permitted-in either its reading or advertising columns that can demoralize or offend the readen Teriiis of Subtscriptiou. Weeklv, one year postage paid six months $1.15 .65 Daily arid Tri-wcekly TJ-ibtine. The Daily Morning Tribune is now the lead ing Republican daily of the the Northwest and is unsurpassed as a newspaper: Daily, one year. $12.00 per month. 1:00 Tri-Weekly, onemonths. year: 0.00 Bi 3.0 0 three months. 1:50 Prcniiutiiit. To each new yearly subrcriber theI publishers arc! books printed on good paper, with clear handsome type and paper binding: History of Nineteenth Century. R. McKenzie. Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte Last Days of Pompeii by Bulwer Lytton: Jo'hn Halifax, Gentleman by Mjss Miilock. Pickwick Papers by Chai ies Dicken: Wordsworth's Selected Poems: by Arnold. Clubs and Agent* Besides, furalshmg any, one of the above named valuable piremiiiiris to e"ach new yearly subscriber we will preaeut the Garfield portrait or either one of the books to any old subscri ber or other person who will send us the names of three new subscribers for one jc.tr accom panied with .the cash (|3.45). A7iy one who sends us a club of twenty-five new*subscribers at $1.15 each will receive for his services trie Garfield portrait and all the six books named in the list: No offer so liberal as this is made by any other paper in Americai Send in the clubs. Remittances shoul.1 be made by Pst,offio Monev Order, bank check, or registen-d letter. Sample copies will ,be sent free bu application by postal card. All postmasters,sirc authorized to receive and forward in the above manner, subscriptions to The Farmers' Union and Weekly Tribune and the Daily arid Tri-Weekly Tribune. Address all letters, to THE TRD3UNE,CO. Minneapolis! Minn," s^%^^:j^s^te^^iWM, -pJ^^^te^wfe^ilB-^ L'^^fei^Sg E. M. Walsh, General Dealer in Hardware, Tinware, Stoves, 3ar Iron, Steel and Builders' Material Afcent for the CELEBRATED MOKITOR PLOWS, Everything in Tin, Iron or Brass* Ornamental or Practical, wsu* ally kept by the Trade. Prices RedUeedj CROOKSTON, MIKS1. Tom Morris, Deals WatchsSpClocks&Jewelry, Crookston Minn. Find Wateh Repairing Care* fully Done and Guaranteed, The FctmMs Rockford Movement art ^.-our especial Stock. This is the culmination f Mechanical I*u genuity i Watcher: Thtiy are cheaper, better hence more accu rate and durable than any other yat iavtnteti: A large and Well ste!ected stock of Clocks from-92 up to fancy prices. A practical Watchmaker myselfj I guarantee all maUrial sold as represented: And all work undertaken as perfect as can be done: Watches dr goods for repair can be left at the SUKAF Office in Warren. R. C. SNYDER, Wagons, lleighs smd Cutters MADE TO ORDER, tai2'T*:i2itA.ij Jdbbef* and Repairfe? Mattresses and Spring 8 FOR SALS: Neck YokeS aiifl Whlfttetas f?ml .Iteady for Use.' Anything wanted iii Wood ic fett Silbr't I^Dtiet?: vYhcel-biirroVg For ak: H. 0, MENT^mi bealer in' FARM llJGfa& arrefi, fifiihrlg Ffch Bros'. & Milbitfn WafefiSSp Beei-e & Mdhiiot H&WSj McCormick iwing ahd Wm Binders,~Harvesier aha Mowers? Ji I. Ca&e Ehgiiieli ah Threto's. Superior $6ftite3i m0: