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7 Av TIE EULL7 CCTOTT WATCHMAN. Published Kverj Saturday, —AT— C1T «T 14 I 'OTsT *h AIT —HY— WALTER & OROPFAGIESER, —AT— $2 Per Year, in Advance. "OFFICIAL DIRECTORY. TERRITORIAL. Delegate in Congress—J. H. Raymond. Governor—N. Orilwty Set ret ary—J. II Teller. Treasurer—W. H. McVsy. Auditor—George L. Ordwaj. Surveyor General—Corte/. Fessenden. Superintendent of Public instruction— W. II. II Beadle. Chief Justin- of Supreme Court—Alonzo J. Kd^erton. Associate Justice* of the Supreme Court —Wm. E. J. Church, J. P. Kidder. i$. B. Hudson. United States District Attorney—llugli J. Campbell. United iStnten Marshal—Harrison Allen. SI LLY COUNTY. Commissioners.—(J J. MilleU, 8r B. P. Hoover. N. H. Yninp. Sheriff—(J. J. MilleU, Jr. Treasurer—Charles Afar. Coroner—I)r. A. Stevens. Surveyor—William Aihley JoDM. Assessor—Orr \V L«-e. Clerk of Court—II. \V. Ediferton. Jtld eT)f Probate—Merit Sweeney. Superintendent of Sriioula—Davlil pies. y lie sinter of Deeds and Ex Offlcio carefully Couhty Clerk. J. A. Melonn. Justices of the I'eare—Win. I'. Ito^, G. W. Everts. P. K- ily, D. D. Bryant Constables—Henry W. Spra^ue. Gebrge Bowers, (leu. H. lVa.se. CLIFTON HOUSE, WM. P. ROSS. Proprietor, CMI'TIIY DAKOTA. Flint-clans aeeonuundations. aonable. Livery in ('onneetion. Hates rea tt JESSE M. SPOON'RR. Contractor and Builder, PI iRRI. DaaOTA. Parties who eontemplatc the erection of buildings, either in town or country. would do well to ret my figures. Estimat* s furn ished on short notice. 13-ihn wwm. P. KOSSp A i A ii VjiS I O N 1 Transacts a general Land Business. Locating a Specialty. Office at t'lifton xvi S. H. NEAL, Attorney 11 Law. and hi, Lou ui tavun Agent, CLIFTON. DAKOTA. GSA1TT & ROBERTS. Huron, D. T. Cmitest- prosecuted. Final Proufs made $,"0,000 in Loan on Fi nal Proofs. Some excellent claim* on hand. l7-im u. t\ n 1 I Whiu- aSSHN, RA"D3LPH I WHITE, Attorneys and Counselors nt Law and La & Loan Agents, BU NT, DAKOTA, With offices at Blunt and Huron, are ^Mjccially prepared to do prompt and care ful work in Laud matters before the U. S. Lund Office. Q60t000i" Loan on Sully county Final Pro..t- See them. n i K O Y K K O S K S.E. DJCKOVER, Proprietor, BLUNT, DAK. Headquarters for all Stage north itnd northwest. Linen for the Good hath rooms in connection with house. TIIK KIKST CI.ASM HOTEL or TIIK TOWN. E. 1'. WKSTOVER, hi Estile iti lois Agent, BLUNT, DAKOTA. Final l*Pofs attended to. Locate par ties on lands in Hugh's, Sully, and ad joining counties. xvi \t. M. CRAIIAM, l'rwrt. A *. LDKBM, Cashier. BANK of BLUNT BLI .NT, 1 A K »T V TkAMIACT A UkKKKAI. liAJtKIJfO BCIISIW. Refer by permission to I'nion National Hank, Hacine. WK Hon. Wm. Lyon, 'Associate Justice Supreme Court, Madison, Wis. Hon. It. A. Maxwell. State Treas urer of New York. Albany, N. Y. xvi 0. N. HAWLEY AGO.. W o'-estile and Ret.ill De ilersia Groceries, FroTisisns, Crockery, Glut- ware, Cigars and Tcbacc-B.&c., HUNT, DAKOTA. By selling good goods nt .small profits and"bv fnir dealing, we hope to merit the confidence and esteem of our patrons and friends. Call and see us. augli jr HOME HAPPEN INCS. —Blunt has a lady physician. —Money to Loan by O. W. Lee, Clif ton. —Carl Werner, of Blunt, was in town, Monday. —J. A. White, the stirring land agent of Blunt, was in town -proving 'em up," Monday. —Now is a good time to buy your coal—provided, always, that you have the money to do it with. —B. I*. Hoover has been building a new barn at his ranch adjoinging town, this week, Fred Beyer bossing the job. —John Deveny returned, Monday evening, from Brookings, and is look ing after his claim and cussing be cause he cannot prove up. —Moat of the weather prognostica tors fore-tell a inild and comfortable winter. Much obliged. That is the kind we are longing for. —With letter postaigeonly two cents the lmys can a/ford to remember KM 11 the girl I left behind :ne." often, until they bring her out intiir sprin (JjiXfV \V. Leo to get money on RiafdProofs. —IX C. Nicnt, of Chicago, was in Clifton, Monday, to record the deed of the plat of Fair Bunk, a new town on the river in the western part of Sully county—sec. 8,115-80. Many homesteaders are nowjaiM" ing on their liim\jixttorrrTT~muw spring. an?t eTCT5HTme one goes out into the country new improvements greet the eye. C^^Tlie first Lax paid in Sully county was handed in,Tuesday, by Charles Nu^toon, (if section 10/113-78, $4.!1. The next lucky man was W. Harvey »ri„ p.. ir.nin.^.i.n' —The |eople who live back in the frigid zones of the Eastern Suites are to be eoinmiserat**!. Come out and bask in the genial rays of the Dakota sun and breathe our balmy and health giving atmosphere. —The soldier boys at Fort sully are now cutting their winter supply rf wood, each company cutting 125 eon Is. (i uess the boys wont hurt themselves, as each mail is only required to cut half a cord, each. —A custom flouring mill is some thing greatly demanded in this section some place where feed can lie ground to onler, and the man or company put ting such an enterprise into operation will unquestionably reap a lionanza. —The tax-l»ook foj- Sully county u now in the hands of Deputy Trcasurei J. A*. Meloon. Though not strictly due until Nov. 1st, all parties who de sire to pa}- can do so at auy time and get their receipt therefor. There an doubtless some who are intending to leave who will be glad to avail them selves of the opportunity, as it will avoid the |xssibility of their Iteing re turned as delinquents while away. —If there were .a few tenement houses in Clifton to rent at reasonable figure, there is no question but what a nutnlier of fumilies would move in to town for the purpose of schooling their children this winter but many who would like to do so are unable to buy lots and go to the expense of putting up a building suitable to pmtect them from the cold. Is there any one who will look after the matter —Some! ly fan us. The diction with which the l'ierre Signal allegori cally ascends the most altisonous rhe torical amplification of a subject takes our breath. Hear it: It is not every man that has the sand to talk sand. But sand, its component parts, quick sand, and its relative bearings are themes of geological deduction that are creating argumentative discussions upon the relative merits of an under current, or subtratum flow in the pots dam sandstone of a late de|xsit, over lying the primitive or fundamental !ed-rock of silurian, lime aud slate which formed a contact vein, of which the mighty Missouri took advantage.' All kinds of blanks printed st this olUce. Leave your onler. Viwuwasiwi (J. VOLUME I. CLIFTON, SULLY COUNTY, DAKOTA, SATURDAY, OCTOBKR M, 1883. NUMBKR 26. —John Blaisdell returned from a trip to Ft. Sully, Monday. —O. W. Lee will write up your pa pers and loan you money on final pnof. —Thomas J. Wolff, Esq., of Pierre, was in Clifton on business, Monday. Fred Oaring, a dairyman at Fort Sully, sjMmt the first part of the week in town. —K. F. Whitman and Frank R. Colburn left for their old home at Belvidere, III., on Wendesday. —Itev. Henrv Truro Bray, of sec. 5, 112-78, and B. F. Summy, of sec. 29, 113-78, were in town, Tuesday. —Snow has visited Muine, Michigan, Wisconsin and Minnesota, but fine fall weather still prevails in this section of Dakota. —The Fort Sully soldier boys won two out of the four prizes at the re*ent Fort Snelling shooting tournament. Good for the boys. —Notwithstanding Huron and Pierre parties have shut down, County Clerk J. A.'•Meloon is still lending money on Final Proofs.. —All the wheat we have heard of being marketed in this part of Dakota ^Hdetl NO. 1 hard. That's the kind we phnxse to raise. —o\\ Warden, George G. Ware and Geo.i A. Warden, of Clearwater, spent Jwnday night in Clifton and proved/tip, Tuesday ^-^Ve notice that a good many through the country are banking up their shacks. Good idea, for it is get ting time to look for cold weather. —The price on both coal and lum seems to be gradually advancing, atml those who will have to buy will hjubtless save money by doing it at tlieir earliest convenience. -'Parties desiring money with which to prove up should notify us at least ten datys previous to day of proving up. IIoOVKR & ElMlKRTON. —The soldier IK»VS at Fort Sully raised some sujerb garden truck" tlm summer, each company tilling a patch •separately. John Blaisdell brought us over an 8-pound beet, grown by Company "E." Altogether the IH»VS ifrew some 400 bushels of the finest of potatoes, said to average newly a pound, each. —Our senior had the pleasure of spending last Sabbath evening and night at the hospitable home of County Commissioner J. Millett, Sr., and his genial wife. Mr. Millett is pleas antly located on the Missouri river on what is known as the island,' at the mouth of the (kobojo, with plenty of jjood waiter, plenty of timlterand a rich alluvial soil. He has .'JO acres cleared of tiinlier and under fence and a good state of cultivation, from which some of the finest cereal and vegetable pn 1 actions of the country has been grown. Heaps of the finest melons, squashes, onions, eabbaiges, turnips, beets, &c„ were lying amutul in profusion, and ye quill bore away a whole load as trophies of his visit. Mr. Millett is a valuable gentleman to have in our county, not only in his oflicial cajwicity of County Commissioner, in which po sition he has show n rare judgment and unswerving integrity, but in the pursuit of agriculture, in which he brings to bear both long and valuable experience and successful exjierimeiits. New varieties of vegetables, grains, fruits, &e., aud the Ijest methods for their culture, are given careful study and experiments, and the results are something which we can all profit by. Mr. Millett has an almost unluniUHl numlter of fine cottonw»od, and willow trees, besides evergreens, box-alders, &t\, which he is selling very cheap. Teachers' Examination. A Teachers' Examination will l»e held at Clifton, on Tuesday, October 23,1883. 1). STAPLES, Supt. School Convention. There will be Ii Convention of the new school township officers of Sully county, held nt t'lifton on Saturday. Oct. 27. lHs. at 1 o'clock, a.m., for the purpose of ad vising together in regard to the udoption of school hooks any furniture. I), STAIM.KS. Superintendent. —October's as pleasant as May. —Whnat is bringing about 75 cents per bushel. —We predict that the festive rattler will be aliout exterminated this seaisoii. —The Forest City Press editor litis a potato weighing 4 pounds and 2 ounces. Next? —Andrew McFall is getting material on the ground for his residence in Clif ton. —Henry W. Edgerton, Clerk of the District Court, paid a business visit to Hunm this week. —Ira N. Jones,of Owattonna, Minn., has been looking after his claim east of town, this week. —W. If. Cornell of section 23. a couple of miles southeast of Clifton has finished a well at 30 feet with five (feet of good water. —Our Rattlesnake William is on the war path again. M. M. Kenny heads him ofr by recently slaughtering his sixth rattler. -Final Proofs made by 0. W. Lee, Notary Public. —For good reliable Final Proof work call on S. II. Neal, attorney, Clifton, He will lend you money at reasonable rates. School Convention. As will be seen by notice, elsewhere, a convention of the township school ltoanls of Sully county has been called to meet at Clifton two weeks from to day, Oct. 27, 1883. The object of the meeting is to take intelligent and uni ted action upon the adoption of text books and school furniture for the schools of the county. There has lieett long studies of improvement in both books and Airnit tire for the convenience and health tf children since the school days of the men and women of to-day. The books that we used to study have Income obsolete and behind the times, while the old w»»oden benches without backs upon which we used to sit, so high that our feet would not touch the floor, would do for torture in the days of inquisition. Su|er:ntendent Staples has a uumlier of series of text-lxoks and some school furniture, and we also have three or four sets of books ait this ofllce, while it is exjeeted that other school officers will have samples for imqicction at said convention, so that the united wisdom of the many may be bn»ught to bear in selecting the !est for the schools of the county. The best figures obtainable from the publishers of books and manufacturers of furniture will le obtaired, so that in the long run many hundreds, and, |Hrhaps, thousands of dollars may le saved, to the people, for if the same lxoks and furniture are adopted the publishers and manufacturers can af f'onl to give us belter prices than if the same were purchased here ami there in township quantities, and a uniformity l»e had in all the schools. We hojH.' to not only see every elected school ofll tier, but every |)erson interested in the success and progress of our schools, present at this convention. Turn out and devote a day to this important matter aind the little ones will rise up and call you blessed. BOSTON. MASS., October2.—A heavy storm of rain aud snow has prevailed in Eastern Vermont for the last twelve hours. Freight cars coming from Northern to Central Vermont are cov ered with snow. Rain is very much needed. Springs and streams are low er than before for twenty years. Cora ami jM)tatocs are badly affected by the drouth, and the apple cnp will }c near ly a failure thnmghout the Staite. The heavy rain is quite general thmughout New England. At St. Johnsbury the weight of the snow damaged apple trees and telegraph [tolcs. MORAL:—Come to Dakota where we have almost perennial fine weather. THK death of Jefferson P. Kidder, of the Dakota Supreme Bench and Judge of the 4th Judicial District, which occurred last week, is mourned by all Dakotaians. WA NTKI.—I want to trade a yoke of oxen aind a pair of |»onies for a driving team of young American horses. For particulars inquire at once at WATCH MAN office, Clifton. G. J. MiLLrrr, St. S. P. HOOVER, Parties This space l»elongs to Hayden Bros., Pierre, Dsikota, but they are so busy unpackinga and marking down to the lowest possible figure the largest and most complete stock nf DRY GOODS ever brought to the Territory, that they have no time to prepare an aidv until next week. In the interim don't buy a cent's worth of anything until you have given them a call. Hoover & Edgerton, Money Loaned on Final Proofs. INSURANCE ON FARM PROPERTY. Improvements made on Tree Claims and Taxes Paid for Non-Residents. Collections Made. PLATS CORRECTED TO LATEST MAILS, de«iring money wub which to prove up ahoulti previous to day of proving up. MR. HOOVER, having been a resident of 8wlly county for seven ywm, Mi familiar with all lands in Sully ami Potter counties, is well prepared to do locating. REFERENCE:-FIRST NATIONAL BANK, ANlHinm.VS' HANK.OF I'IKKRK EDMUNDS,HUD SON & CO., HANKKKS, YANKTON, D. T. H. W. EDOKETON, aeUty os s4 least tea faurs a v /fc \?sv