CHAUTAUQUAOPENS JULY »th BUV YOUR SEASON TlCRtT* OF THE COMMITTEE BEFORE THE. #Ml AND SAVE 50c. YOU ARE SURE TO GET YOUR MONEY'8 WORTH. ALL ATTRACTIONS GUARANTEED. THE DICKINSON PRESS, SATURDAY, JULY 4,1914.

cupies.' The internatiorial boundary be- tween Dakota arid Canada was es­ ' T^JV tablished in 1823. Fremont in the interests of scien­ ;;ic: tific investigation spent the winter of r 1856 at Devils Lake. '~ : The earliest settlements made in Dakota were near Pembina. Lord 3rd to 13th K Selkirk's settlement about . forty, V l> miles from the mouth of the Rai ifefflfSsSsiiaN 'Abso/ufe/yfafifr " ^5«;4SS5S'Sfr:. riter in 1811, was a most notable It event. \ We have on sale our entire stock of boys' clothing Settlements were made at Elbow- iJi ; ; only Bakihg Powder madeF- woods and at Sibly Island in 1866. at a Discount of 20 per cent. from Royal CrapeCreamofTartar The Cannon^ Ball country was the theater of trading in the early years, NO ALUM, NO LIME PH08PHATE as was also the vicinity of where Mandan stands, that having fonrierly Also a very choice lot of Men' Suits, ' 'SHtW ' been the home of the Indian tribe lace A)n the banks of the Red river these same. -•experience necessary. Write today. working for suffrage and equal rights ust within the Territory of Dakota. .. "Hb» Hawks Nursery Co., Wauwatosa, for women. Miss Maysie Dinsdale This priest and Father DeSmet were Ready Wis.—adv. 6-20-4p wes elected president; Miss Myrtle Parker, secretary and Miss Olive doing a great work among the In­ Whaley, treasurer.' dians at that time and incidentally - LOCAL NEWS A second meeting was held at the for the government of this country, You are invited to call and inspect our stock of this season's new Soules home Monday evening when inasmuch as their labors were for Silver Brand Shirts. An Outing Shirt ; A son was born on June 30th, to plans were laid for the near future. peace and the good will of all the 3Ir. and Mrs. William Carroll. Twenty-eight young ladies were pres­ numerous conflicting elements of so­ Come in right away, if you can—whether you are ready to buy' H. P. Dinius came up from Rich- ent, ten charter members and eigh­ ciety that were engaged in exploiting of not We want you to see the shirts while the assortments are this country at that time; notably the complete and at their best. &rdton on Wednesday with the vil­ teen who became members. The antagonistic interests of the Hudson is what you lage assessment books. club is open to all young ladies of the All the best shirt cloths 'are well represented. The patterns are city who have attained the age of 17. Bay Fur Co. and > the American or MisS Chloe Beeman arrived Tues­ Another meeting will be held next Northwestern Fur Company. unusually attractive and the finish—perfection. day evening from Mott to visit with Monday evening when all young The local history of this immediate' You'll have no difficulty in finding garments exactly to your liking. want to wear • john'Auer and family. ladies interested are urged to be locality is pretty well known, having Prof. F. G. Leager was expecting present. A food sale is to be held been written about of late years by. : numerous writers in the interest of Silver Brand Shirts ; iProf- Karl Schulz to arrive this week Saturday at the Parker & Sons Meat the State Historical Society's publi­ irfrom St. Paul to assist for two market. cations. This society has an histori­ $1.00 and $1.25 at the •months in giving musical instruc­ cal collecion in a room in the capitol tions. building at Bismarck but the room IDE SHIRTS ARE WORTH MORE MONEY, d»Q A A The Rice & Dore Water Carnival for the collection is totally inade­ UP TO «pO*UU train went through Dickinson on HISTORIAN CRM'S LETTER quate and very dangerously located Wednesday en route to Jamestown. inasmuch that if the building should' Chautauqua : This is a street carnival and started burn there could be nothing saved : from Portland, Oregon. : r Read at the Old Settlers Association of all the valuable collection. It Miss Mattie Mitchell, who has been- % at Gladstone en-June 22nd~.< would be impossible to replace- it.:;*?* a guest at the.Jessen home for the When the Northern Pacific railway If you can, can all yoifcan; our new cans will be past few days, left ficwr Jamestown Members of the. Old Settlers Asso­ reached the Red river a great im­ - Tuesday evening. From there she ciation, Ladies arid Gentlemen. petus to immigration was given and in this week. will return to her home at Oakes. According to the "usual custom of the . attention of the public was called our association your historian will to the possibilities of the region ly­ i. A. T. Crow! and A. H. Deiters did offer a little history of Dakota. ing west of that river; the mceptor not start on their Black . Hills trip as I shall not attempt any connected of the scheme to run a transconti­ planned. The raincaused them to de- narrative but will only tell of some nental road across .the plains of Da­ : lay. They expect to leave for Min- of tiie most interesting events .in the kota, to say nothing about the west­ " nesota points within a few days and settlement of the territory that has ward way through , Idaho may decide to try the Yellowstone been known by the jiame Dakota and. Washington states, was deemed Trail. - , since 1858, when it was created. probleinatic to say the least, but the • ; Archie and Elmer Merrill werein President Lincoln appointed the men that were at the helm had great from their farais noar the Kildeer first- Territorial officers, With William faith that the whole country would & mountains , the first of the week. El-' Jayne as governor. • He arrived at prove to be riot only habitable but "THE QUALITY STORE" l ., mer returned Wednesday, .with a load Yankton May the 27th, 186^, and lit for all sorts of farming and stock of hog fencing.' Each have about took office when the organic life of raising activities, their faith has been sixty hogs. They filan to feed all Dakota began. Mr. Jayne is alive so fully proven to have been not mis­ their griun to their stock. and lives in Illinois. placed, that we are now living in" a The first assembly met in 1862, and most prosperous, and as Lewis and D. D. Sullivan, ratical medalist of Congress was memorialized in 1874. Clark denominated the country of national boundary from Montana in­ Lands by buying a number of milch winter the wind blew as it never blew Fargo, will visit Dickinson person- asking that the Territory be divided 'most delightsome land." to. Canada and safety. cows for the purpose of furnishing before or has since and when spring V . ally Saturday, July 18th. ' All per- on the 46th parellel of latitude with Lewis and Clark found the Indians Custer's expedition to the Black the soldiers at the Little came we would ask the old timers if • sons having defective eyesight or the name of the north state Pembina. near their Fort Mandan, raising Hills was a scientific one, sent to de­ with milk.' they had ever seen the like and they • who need their glasses changed or It was eventually divided on that line every good thing that is known to termine the vexed question tff The Custer Trail ranch was the would answer that they never had, renewed Should call and Bee him. Of­ but with the name , as known .at our gardens today, such as beans, whether the hills contained gold in first ranching project in the Bad nor they never would again, which fice at St. Charles hotel.—adv. 7-4-8t this time. . corn, pumpkins, melons, potatoes of such quantities as to warrant the Lands; the ranch was owned and sounded significant to me. a rather inferior land it is true, but government at Washington in open­ operated by Eaton Brothers. They Miss Amber Waller of the Corn- The Territory was admitted into sold the cattle to A. C.. Huidekoper, But we toughed it out and we are . wall Millinery store, left Thursday the Union as a state in 1889, and nevertheless potatoes. With these ing the hills to gold diggers and here, very much alive, especially to ; for her home in Jamestown, where John Miller was its first, elected gov­ Indians the members of the expedi­ othersT' The scientist that accompa­ who transferred the cattle late in the the fact that we are making history she will visit for two weeks. She ernor; the first state legislature con­ tion traded very amicably and were nied the expedition reported that season of 1882, to the ranch which today and that that history will be ~ will then go on: to the Twin Cities, vened December. 20th, 1889. During entertained in most hospitable style there was no gold, but that story afterward became famous as the H read by future generations, who will 4 where she will enter the wholesale its first session Gilbert: ..Pierce arid and later from their midst there was discredited and the outcome was T horse ranch. read critically, so it will behoove us arose a most competent guide for that the hills country was completely The first crops of any value were millinery houses to become familiar Lyman R. Casey were elected United raised in 1883 near Dickinson by to be wise in our enactments of law ;-with, the fall-styles. States senators. their future advance in the person of overrun by prospectors, notwith- and live so morally and simply that Some notable expeditions in the a Frenchman by the name of Cha standi&g the greatest efforts were Davis Brothers on section 36-140-96, we shall be credited with having A fine driving horse belonging to early days of its history have crossed baneau and his wife, Bird Woman. made to prevent. This fact, and later and by Charles Burke on section 30, given posterity a heritage of some­ August Bentz was received by ex- Dakota. Carvers' Expedition crossed The latter has been said and sung the ghost-dance incident, brought in the township east. thing better than wealth. vtvpress^in Dickinson on the first of the the southerri part of and and now stands in the park at Bis­ about the battles of Wounded Knee The first good crop of wheat was » delayed passenger trains reaching and Fine Ridge and was really the raised in 1884, the yield being over * < went into Dakota to about where marck cast in endureing bronze, look­ >\ the city just before noon on Wednes­ Yankton now stands, in 1768, ing ever westward toward the land ultimate cause. of Sitting Bull's 20 bushels to the acre. Crops were day. The animal was put into the ex­ Long's expedition for exploration of setting suns. demise at his summer camp on Cot­ raised at Dickinson, Gladstone and press car in Wisconsin and readied tonwood creek in 1890. Taylor that year. C. R. Cooke did a TUBERCULOSIS v had, in the year 1784, come from the The Northern Pacific reached the . In addition to plenty of fresh air and the city in fine condition. The cost east across the country about whete in 1878, crossed the The county of Stark was named for great percent of the threshing with v; of« shipping this way was-about $50. s George Stark, who was at that time an eight horse power machine. proper diet, those suffering from or who Carver came later arid struck the. river .on . the ice in 1879, reached are predisposed to Tuberculosis are rec­ 7 general , manager of the N. P. Ry. Co. The variety of wheat was some­ O^ W. Roberts ^f .;. Bismuck, wk® heftdwaters of the Red riyer of the Greeri river (now Gladstone) in 1880, ommended to use Bckman's Alterative to north .and ^followed it to its conflu­ advanced during 1881 to the Yellow­ He.' opened a farm near "Bismarck for thing from the east and was a soft AbaS charge of the Government thei express purpose of demonstrat­ wheat but when it became fully ac­ stop night sweats, banish fever and hast­ / Weather Bureau there, was in the ence wit& Lake Winnipeg. .. stone river, where the earliest set­ en recovery. This medicine, by reason of city . Tuesday evening. He has been The notable expedition of Lewis tlers of tins cojintry found it, with ing that this country was fitted for climated it became as hard as any the construction train at Fallon's farming. . wheat. its successful use during the past, war­ •'j inspecting the condition in regard to and Clark came in 1803, up t&e Mis­ The county was organized in the Many years elapsed and they were rants the fullest Investigation possible I" the large, fall of. rain in this section souri river and built Houses of logs creek, 80 miles farther west, in the by every sufferer. and stockaded them with'a high fence eariy months of 1882. year 1884, with James Collister, H. weary years , sometimes when we the pa^: week. He reached here by L. Dickinson of Dickinson and James were trying oh so hard to farm with­ Eckman's Alterative is most efficacious !V ^ vray tff the Soo S'outii from Bismarck, of poles set deeply in the ground and The building of the railway across In bronchial catarrh and severe throat dignified their labor by riainiiig the the country aroused the Indians to a Q. Campbell of Gladstone, commis­ out adequate utensils, encountering 1 and;the Mflvraukee %.New England. r sioners. They were appointed by very discouraging years of drought and lung affections, and In upbuilding the place Fort ^Mimdari. This place was frenzy of dispair almost, for they system. It contains no narcotics, nor Prudent A. McClure. of the just opposite to where the Knife saw.;with ari almost prophetic ejre Territorial Governor C. C. Ordway. and cold winters as well. I can re­ ,, The first notorial commission ob­ member very distinctly the hard harmful or habit-forming drugs. Accept - First State bsak at Dunn Center, river enters the Missouri river in la­ that their free hunting grounds, if no substitutes. Sold by leading drug­ s came in Tuesday from tiie no^h. He titude 47, degrees 21. minutes and* 47 farmers lE)ann county last week - than cific ocfean shor.e. > i . r i » Whidi was in diiarge of Fred Gerard, ed in re-electing the old commission­ arotmii lHckinson, and that is saying ^^it's jeKriedition in Uie interest, of with oiily 19 men to aid hiin- , How­ ers, with Chas. Klinefelter assessor; ia good deal, for twp inches^ m N. C. Lawrence, register of deeds; K( r?s scwrities at Astoria, on the ever, after a fight-of over ten hours i§r^ here. A r - duratloin, He was able to drive them Lamereaux, treasurer, Pacffic shon ti^ar where Lewis and iVuld, auditor; Charles Buirke, (BERRINGER BROS. » Tom. Tottingham retnrned. ^me Clark had xeached that point in 18Q4, off with a loss:to them;of 80 killed ietoSsed-this - country about - on the and 140 wounded. .. . itenderit of schools. ' Iwray iBri^or a'vhftfuntit itjeet? Incidental ta-yjie; baiidihg of. the ne boasts the first roller ari^out"a U&e mqriii soiWhl^iAeC^f^ tMs ^.state in;vJl810. miU west 6f tie Missotui river, built The place for sti&te lArber exSiniiter ^d. bsi >bee!ti When Hunt ^had arrived at a point ISfJikwBi the y: Fort Bfeauford ment built Fo*fc Sewardh at James- in 1884, by Robert Lee of Northport, ;sliapsti:^ tow% XM .Fort'Lincolii at' Bismarck ttich.h' • o • -the first of January^W^ sijr morei There axe a for people resident in •days of work, h% W. td ^veU^- iiorthi to^ h^ zet . and estSMfshed a cantonement ;for . ,e. home of the Aridkum Ind&ou tMops onrQie Z4ttie Ifissouri mer, Staxk county wfco - eaine with the CHOICE MEATS .•WW ,tow« in railways construction crew in 1881 oftms' wede he was in the ^astom Here he bois^: for psddng ;wfa«re:IfedoraHow stands. t)art 'cf the state /Witli'-his "ttoto" «ad lie purpose^ . The battle, of WMte Stone bnttes Mike and Pat McGktfey* E. F. Mes* along the Pleasant Valley wwite from WasfoUghtJusteastof'Bismarck seranith, Mr. tad- MrK ^olm' Leon- Writs that the Red rivw yaUey ;is berger. John McDolutofi^i and 'per- dl and $he Luuaris •- defeated, and Stfuri^ J*S5 river,^wlier#"^ tribes"M field s^ss ^e ^ ^ hara others. Kit DinsdMe,, Charles : - wwmwnMHiH Fruits and '•MaadaiiB latjec WeSi^rau^ ftowiELrd; thd - Bad - Lands, F. Merfy and C. R Cooke. werejBso Re^jGrosventersB ifie. fngpit in 1881. t am W^ot ' JnlnHiSro flMt / being brought to l»y at ._ oui . Kildeer mountains,. whgre % Sttlly t&e^4at^er> named in Glendive* iljMxfc: r 1 loa the zailway companS' to ^leiuant Vallevi, # fought and defeated tiiem, dri"rttt| .de • .the them. into, and thronc^i tiie ;B« G. l"adduch won the disttnc . .^always in stock. Sole agents for Fleischman's Yeast riame-ofthe': Mto ^. putting the ^rst cattle, to the Bad