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i Famous In A Day For Her — Beautiful Complexion Oatmeal Combination Does It A Free Perscription Does Its Overnight. You Can Prepare It At Your Home Work It is my own discovery and to such’ mar- dna Wilder about her won derful comple: E improved pearance of her hands and arms. can do the sume thing if you follow my s: I feel it my duty to and woman What this iption did for me. Just just what brought about such remarka- ble results. Here is the identical pre- scription that removed every defe my face, neck, hands and a you try it you’can form no marvelous change it will mak one application. "The prescription wh x own home ‘ocery and ge package of derwillo and apply night morning. The first application will tonish you. transparent, pecially recommend it for freckles, tan, It makes the skin appear smooth and velvety. I es- y outmeal, and] a Py sun spots, coarse pores, rough skin, rud- diness, wrinkles, and, in fact, ‘every blen the face, hands and arms are jheirs to. If your neck or chest is’ dis- colored from “exposure, apply this com- bination there and the objectionable de- fect will disappear. It is absolutely harm- less and will not produce or stimulate a growth of hai matter how rough and ungainly ds and urms, or r, the oatmeal-derwillo combination wonderful transformation in 12 rs at the most. Thousands who have used it have had the same results I have the best effect be sure derwillo and oatmeal. se and it is so n use it; and is so girl or woman can nufacturers and_drug- a will refund the money. It is sold in this city under a money re- fund guarantee by department stores and all up to date druggists including Len- hart's and Jos. Breslow. ) EARLY DAYS IN DAKOTA | . w| Relation of the Rivers to Exploration and Settlement—Natural Drainage System Impartially Divided by the State Makers—The James and the Sheyenne, “Companion Streams,” Contrasted—Major Coffin’s Scheme for a Ship Canal from Montana to the Mississippi. The rivers of Dakota, particularly the Missouri, furnished the original approaches to the new land. Embark- ing usually at St. Louis, the fur trad- ers were the first to enter the wilder- ness. Followed after a long interval the explorers, adventurers, famous travelers, missionaries, scientists and savants. Pierre Dorion, a trader xe- presenting French merchants of St. Louis, bartered with the Yankton In- dians as early as 1785. Pierre Gar- reau five years later continued up the river to a point near what is now the ‘®)made himself at home with the Rees, the foes of the war-like Sioux. By 1796 several trading posts had been estab- lished along the river, The Lewis and Clark expedition be- ‘an its long journey on the Missouri in May, 1804. The Astorian expedi- tion, named after John Jacob Astor, the head of a New York fur trading company, passed up the Missouri to the mouth of the Grand river in 1811 and then followed that tributary west- ward and explored the northern Black Hills. The first permanent settle- ments or trading posts were made along the Missouri, Big Sioux and James rivers in 1817. Port Pierre, across the Missouri from the present capital, is said to be the site of the oldest continuous settle- ment by whites in the South Dakota area. Rev. Stephen R. Riggs, whose name is inseparably linked with that of Rev. Thomas S. Williamson, is credited with holding the first Protestant ser- vice in what is now South Dakota. This was at Fort Pierre in 1844. Father Peter John de Smet had visited the Dakota Indians the year before, but it was not until 1849 that he began to establish missions. George Catlin, famous as a painter of Indians, spent part of 1832 along the Missouri. Gen- eral John C. Fremont Joseph Nicollet division line between the Dakotas and i came out to map the country, and in Avedetable PreparationforAs Similating theFood by Regul ting the Stomachsard Thereby: Promoting Digestion, |, Cheerfuiness Sees eles OB on NARCOTIC ress CASTORIA —Rake up and Cart 7 — sun will have dried into our homes. Corral it now, whi pile it up and have i later on. “ CLEAN-UP—BRUSH-UP— DO IT NOW! Clean Up—Remove Ash.and Garbage Piles Accumulations of the Winter—Do it NOW! Clean-up time is at hand—soon-wind and 4 verted into dust to blow about our streets and and teams are available now that will be busy City ordinances prohibit the accumulation of dump heaps in back yards. City ordinances prohibit the growing of weeds in boulevard strips and back yard These ordinances will be strictly enforced. We rely on your personal pride and civic pa- triotism to render it unnecessary-for us to do this work tor you at added expense to you: Ne DO IT NOW—TODAY’S A GOOD TIME TO BEGIN Yours for a Bismarck Beautiful, CASTORIA For Infants and Children. Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria Always Bears the Signature of _ Use For Over Thirty Years | CeNTAUR Away Weeds and other up the litter, to be con- le it is tame; rake it up, t carted away. Wagons Ss. D. C. M’LEAN, Street, Commissioner. + 1old top!” TEA TIPPLINGLL That’s the Way \It Looks Now. With King Booze Dead on July 1; Already Fizz ;Water’s Most Too High to Drink. By FREDERICK M. KERBY N. E, A. Staff Correspogdent New York—“Have an oolong on me, Such is to be the metamorphosis of a famous greeting. Tea is to become the national drink, and the Broadway “tea-hound” is to appear on the Great White Way. When the execution of King Booze takes place on July 1, a new national habit will be born. Such is the belief of Margnret Lawrence, who is called upon to drink more tea daily than any other woman in New York. Every night and twice a day on matinee days, Miss Lawrence tipples tea at an alarming rate. She plays the leading part in Roi Cooper Megrue’s comedy, “Tea for Three.” 2 “I notice that the tea associations | of the United States is going to try to induce everybody to drink tea when prohibition becomes effective,” said Miss Lawrence today. “I have no doubt they will succeed. Tea is very likely to become our national habit, as it is England’s. People will have to drink something. Even now, the wine dinner has almost gone on Broadway. At the present price of champagne, a little dinner for two totals somewhere in the neighborhood of $125. That's pretty high for even the best spender for a single evening across the supper table. “Champagne is going up so rapidly, that with the new war taxes, and the soon be $100 a quart. W! a wine supper then? the fossils of the trans-Missouri re- gaon. S The natural drainage system of each of the two states created by division 1843 Audubon, the scientist, studied | Buford. TAKE PLACE OF CHAMPAGNE ON BROADWAY {ARGARE TT. LAWRENCE" rapidly deminishing supply, it will] Broadway cabarets and cafes will be 0 can afford | replaced by tea gardens, and they will < be just as well patronized as they,are “I expect to see the day when the| now.” Jamestown’s elevation is 1,895 feet and Sioux City's 1,122. Summarizing his data the major would say: - “The route from Jamestown to Sioux on the seventh standard parallel seems | City cannot be equaled, considering its the complement of the other. Each | length, anywhere in the United States. stats has the mighty Missouri while |The mountainous regions of the Unit. the Big Souix in South Dakota foirly | ed States must have an outlet for their Re offsets the significance of the ed |lumber, coal, minerals and agricul- river to North Dakota. No poet like | tural products, and such a canal would Whittier, however, has drawn on his|afford the outlet. It would be the imagination to picture the Big Sioux, |cheapest means of transportation in and its fame is likely to be only local | existence,” at best. West of the Missouri the similarity | is even more striking, In North Da- kota the Little Missouri, upon which Theodore Roosevelt made his home inj} his ranching days, flows north from| its source near the junction of three states, The Dakotas and Montana, then sweeping eastward flows into the Miss- ouri near Elbowoods on the old Fort Berthéld reservation. South of it are| the Knife, the Heart and the forks of the Cannon Ball. Across the line in South Dakota are the Grand, Moreau, the Big Cheyenne, the Teton or Bad and the White, all of which generally flow through the Bad Lands and then across the plains to the parent stream, the Missouri. A footnote in Professor E. John- son’s handbook, “South Dakota, a Re-| public of Friends,” says the act of congress of 1861 creating Dakota ter- ritory also provided “that the river in said territory heretofore known as the River aux Jacque, or James_river, shall hereafter be called the Dakota river.” Some of the first pioneers tried to observe the law, and as late as 1883 Major W. A. Moore started a newspaper at Ordway, which he ex- pected would be the capital, and named it the Dakota Valley Tribune. But the change’ ordered in the name was never taken seriously. Moreover, the pioneers of the ’80s accepted the con-| traction “Jim” for “James” and in common speech at least “Jim” has crowded all other names off the’ boards. The James has been said to be the longest unnavigable river inf the west- ern hemisphere. Early day attempts to operate steamers on the river in- variably ended in failure. In dry sea- sons a man, by stepping from stone to stone, may cross it in many places dry shod. Its source is in North Da- kota and ewithin five miles of the Sheyenne river. _ Both flow south- eastward in parallel courses some 20 or 30 miles apart. Thereafter their ways diverge. The Sheyenne contin- ues south about 100 miles or until it encounters a peculiar watershed in Ransom county and is deflected north- ward again, After flowing about 60 miles northeast, it flows into the Red river of the North below Moorhead. The James, its companion stream, passes by the obstructing watershed and continues its tortuous course tl South Dakota. Near Yankton it joins the Missouri river. j The waters of the James, therefore, eventually mingle with the waters of ie Gulf of Mexico, while {howe ot the eyenne, springing practical ym, the same head, find their way ‘throug! continuing courses into Hudson Major F. F. B. Coffin, who. was state engineer of irrigation in South Dakota in days when it was commonly believed that irrigation was the only thing that could save the country, gave publicity to a plan to ea great waterway of the channel of the James. By his proposal government aid was to be sought in the construc- tion of a ship canal from some point near the confluence of the Missouri and Yellowstone rivers across to the th the Red river, Lake Winnipeg, ‘and } y- SUMMONS. § State of North Dakota, County of Burleigh—ss. In District Court, Sixth Judicial Dis- trict. iy « Caroline Leben, plaintiff, vs. Nicho- las Dockendorf, ‘Katherine Morris, and all other persons unknown claim- ing any estate or interest in, or lien or incumbrance upon tha property de- scribed in the complaint, defendants. The State of North Dakota to the above named defendants: You are hereby summoned to an- swer to the complaint of the plain- tiff in the above entitled action, which said. complaint has been filed trict court, and to serve a copy of your answer upon the subscribers at their office in the city of Velva, in McHenry county, North Dakota, with- in thirty (30) days after the service of this summons upon you, exclusive of the day of such service, and in cease of your failure to appear or an- swer judgment. will be taken against you by défault for the re- lef demanded in the complaint. Dated at Velva, North Dakota, April 12, 1919. BAGLEY & THORPE, Attorneys for Plaintiff. Post Ot fice Address Velva, North Dakota. To the said above named defendants: “You, and each of you, will take no- tice that the obdject*of said above en- titled action is jo determine adverse claims, and to quiet the title of the above named plaintiff, in and to the real estate which is the sub{e action and which described ug follo' ~ half (W 1-2): of ‘Northeast ‘quar- E 1-4) and the East half (E 1-2) Indigégtion—dyspepeia—sour stom- ache flat guy slomscte—belehy, miserable-feeling etomachs—these are Acid-Stomachs, What a lot of misery they cause! How “Acid-Stomach, with ite day- algae day sufferings, does take the out of life! Not only that — - Stomach is always undermining one’s health. Think of what acid does to the teeth—how the acid eate through Beige cnr tee te RC any wonder, then, cid- Stomach saps ‘the of the strongest bodies and wrecks the health of so many You gee in the office of the clerk of said Dis- |’ —Edwin C. Torrey, in the Minneap- | ’ olis Journal. { Acid-Stomach Makes Millions _‘Suff “ ’ TUESDAY, APRIL 22, 1919. . , -. is the policy of the ' “ I Standard Oil Com- pany. of. Indiana to conduct its business’ in _ fairness to all: to the consumer, to the em- ~! ploye, to the stock- ee and to the com- petitor. : The Policy of the | Standard Company (Indiana) To deal fairly with the con- sumer by manufacturing the best petroleum products, dis- tributing them widely and selling them at lowest prices. <To deal fairly with the em- ploye by giving him steady work, compensating him lib- erally, and as far as possible, insuring him against unem- ployment. To deal fairly with the com- fetitor by standing squarely on the broad, general principle of live and let live—by main* \ taining open prices:and never : deviating from them. The Standard Oil Company knows, that, by reason of its refining and distribution facil- ’ ities, and the service it renders to customers, it has*no need to disorganize the market to get its fair share of the busi- : ness, That is all it expects ; _and wants. It is because of adherence to these general policies that the Company has prospered, and the Directors have been able 2 to give a creditable account- ing of their trusteeship to the © 4623 stockholders who have '' ~ ‘ their money invested m the ' Company. he ; StandardOilCompany 910 So. Michigan Avenue Chicago CUWVEVENES BEEK eww we ee ee PRESERVE “se LEATHER LIQUIDS. c70c/ PASTES: For Black White,Tan. and Ox-Blood (dark brown) Shoes- KEEP YOUR SHOES NEAT of the Northwest quarter (NW 1-4) of section eight (8) in Township one hundred forty-two (142) North of Range seventy-nine (79) West, in Bur- leigh County North Dakota. Dated at Velva, North Dakota, April 12th, 1919. \. BAGLEY & THORPE, Attorneys for Plaintiff, Post Of- fice Address, Velva, N. Dak. 4—22 29; 5—5 12 19,26. RENTALS. We have calls every. for houses. Let us know what you have for rent. CITY INSURANCE AGENCY, Phone 220R. HES Ni yoy J Buy Your - : Dog. License Dog licenses are now due and payable at the office of the city. — _., auditor. The fee is$3forfemales ~ = _and $1 for males. Ten days from date officers will be instructed to pick up and hold \ for redemption, subject to dis- patch within ten days, any dog found without a license tag. If Lam not in my office when you call see Mr. MacDonald in fire . : ‘Chris Martineson ~ Chief of Police. the full ont of their 5 Take Eaton and get rid of your Acid-Stomach, ‘This wonderful mod- ern remedy actually takes the excess ‘acid out of the stomach, It quickly and positively relieves -bloat, heart- of ‘Makes the stomach