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Turner County herald. (Hurley, Dakota [S.D.]) 1883-19??, July 15, 1909, Image 1

Image and text provided by South Dakota State Historical Society – State Archives

Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn2001063133/1909-07-15/ed-1/seq-1/

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Fawrup
Our
D. C. RCGG, Pres.
300 Central Ave.
•flu]
JMwS
W
LWMli
'm
4BHAPT1
arance
Sale
are closing out
Summer Dress
will Unci them
Ladies' JV1 Hslin Underwear,Cor
set Covers and Petticoats will
iffirM'^d •!t low
j.lso be oflej-ed
our Spring
Goods and
to be ex-
ceptioDally ii oo(l bargains.
Ladies',Men's and (Miildrcns7
Oxford Shoes and Slippers, of
all kinds, at biir bariraiiis.
All of our Shirt Waists are of
fered at a very low price. They
are ^oinj, fast. Come early to
this sale. He the first one and
vou will have the largest stock
O
to select from. These are all
[rains and useful.
irood ban
•ill:
THE PEOPLE'S STORE
Hand Baxc deal is now called off.
!&u6®tos&la'!
••«asj3asa£iD®«
Try The
Do yon read weekly the want ads 111
the Herald's "Bulletin Board''? It
will make you money to read them.
If you want to hire a man,
sell a house, rent a farm,
buy a cow or any one of a
hundred transactions with
your neighbors put an ad
in is
®lt costs only 5 cents per line and
will bring all the customers in the
country to your door and save you
time and expense. Try it.
Af/mOPOL'S%
THE LKADXNO BUSimSM OOIXEOE OF THE NORTHWEST.
This ichool holds tbe uuiqoe roiition of beinc Ihe largeit, task managed, most thoroughly
lipped bnilneai school anywhere In this part ot (he eountir. ..
H«ad4«afters for the famong Ores* Shorthand, the only reliable and scientific system extant.
W at id at re of up or it
MM.
lastitatlon having
•M*' b^
A k'
Handsome Prospectus
Sent
Fcm
bast elass of stadeats and doing the
Life 100.000 Years Ago
Scientists have found in a cave in
Switzerland bones of men, who lived
100,000 years ago, when life was in
constant danger from wild beasts.
Today the danger, as shown by A W
'Brown of Alexander, Me., is largely
from deadly disease. "If it had not
been for Dr. King's New Discovery,
which cured me, I could not have
lived," he writes, suffering as I did
from a severe lung trouble and stub
born cough." To cure Sore Lungs,
Colds, obstinate Coughs, and prevent
Pneumonia, its the best medicine on
earth. 50c and $1.00. Guaranteed
H. J. Pier. Trial bottle free.
There were lots of drunks in Vi
borg last Monday, attracted here on
account of it being the Fourth (fifth)
and neighboring towns being dry.—
$15 Viborg Enterprise.
Sees Mother Grow Young
"It would be hard to overstate the
wonderful change in my mother
since she began to use Electric Bit
ters," writes Mrs. W. L. Gilpatrick
of Danforth Mo. "Although past
I 70 she seems to really be growing
young again. She suffered untold
misery from dyspepsia for 20 years,
At last she could neither eat, drink
I nor sleep. Doctors gave her us and
all remedies failed till Electric Bit
I ters worked such wanders for her
health." They invigorate all vital
organs, cure Liver and Kidney
troubles, induce sleep, impart
strength and appetite. Only 50c at
H. J. Pier's.
C. M. Reynolds just finished lay
ing 5800 feet of Hurley cement tile
for Geo. Nelson on his Hooker farm,
From what we can see he has done a
MM'
*f*1a good job.—Viborg Enterprise. I
Tortured on a Horse
"For ten years I couldn't ride a
horse without being in torture from 1
piles," writes L. S. Napier, of Rug
less, Cy., "when 611 doctors and!
other remedies failed, Bucklen's
Arnica salve cured me." Infallible
for Piles, Burns, Scalds* Guts, Boils,
Fever Sores. Eczema, Salt Rheum.
Corns, 25c. Guaranteed by H. J.
Pier.
Wm. Potts, who graduated this
year from the College of Law of the
State University, left last week for
Olivet, where he will enter upon the
practice of his profession. He had
intended at first to locate at Spring
field, but decided that Olivet was
a better point. Mr. Potts is a young
man who possesses the necessary
energy for making a success of any
thing he undertakes, and we can
recommend him to the good people
of Hutch'nson county.—Vermillion
Republican.
A Night Rider' Raid
The worst night riders are calomel
croton oil or aloes pills. They raid
your bed to rob you of rest. Not so
with Dr. King's New Life Pills.
They never distress or inconvenience
but always cleanse the system, cur
ing Colds, Headache, Constipation
Malaria, 25c at H. J. Pier's.
Attorney S. H. Wright, of Sioux
Falls, a former resident of Center
ville, met with an accident Friday
afternoon while attempting to board
a street car in his home city. The
car started up suddenly and he was
thrown off his balance and dragged
some distance, his right leg being
badly lacerated.—Centerville Jour
nal.
A failing tiny nerve—no larger
than the finest silken thread—takes
from the heart its [papulae, its pow
er, its regularity. The Stomach also
has its hidden or inside nervt. It
was Dr. Shoop who first told us it
was wrong to drug a weak or failing
Stomach, Heart or kidneys. His
prescription—Dr. Shoop's Restora
tive-is directed straight for the
cause of these ailments—these weak
and faltering inside nerves. This,
no doubt, clearly explains why the
Restorative has of late grown so
rapidly in popularity. Druggists
say that those who test the Restora
tive even for a few days soon be'
come fully convinced of its wonder
ful merit. Anyway, don't drug the
organ. Treating the
cause
ness is the only
VOLUME XXIV HUKLEY, SOUTH DAKOTA, THURSDAY, JULY 15, 1909. NUMBER 14.
of sick­
sensible
and
ful w«y. Sold by J, Pier*
success­
SPECIAL
atS2S.ll
We show a particularly
cHo]£6
selection of patterns
and colors at this price.
IJThis price means the high
est grade of man-tailored
garments, the very newest
ideas in style.
CJ Paying $25.00 for a suit
of these clothes is economy.
(]j Local tailors can not give
equal value at $
10.00 more.
Only because of the im-1
mense volume of business
done by
Carl Joseph & Co.
Tailor», Chicago
If Is such high grade value
possible at $25.00.
€J Your protection in fit,
style and service is our
guarantee.
Satisfaction,
or your Monty back.
Fawrup
Nelson
CHECKING NOXIOUS WEEDS.
Line of Road Improvement TWat
Should Not B« Overlooked.
It to caconraglng to Me the attention
that is being p«Kl to good roads all
through the United States. Various
state organizations are taking the mat
ter up, national conventions axe being
held, and an international meeting wan
recently called to convene in Franco.
Everything jolnta toward better high
ways, better facilities for marketing
crops and better conditions for the
farmer.
A good roud brings one ntvtrer to his
neighbors, nearer to hie church and
school and nearer to his market. The
time will noon come when one will
sjCHk of a fnnn ns being ten minutes
distant from town rather than two
miles. The popularity which the auto
mobile is rapidly acquiring among
farmer* will promote this good roads
movement.
There is a gpieodld opportunity for
the individual to help the good work
along by taking care of the rond3 in
front of hie own farm. There la no
surer method than to take pride in the
road that goes pa»t your door.
There is one line of road improve
ment—the holding In check of noxious
weeds—that is frequently overlooked.
Every roadway can 1* kept free from
these with comparatively little labor
If the n»att«r Is taken up promptly.
Esch weed tliat matures bears a more
prolific crop of wed than Its prede
cessor. If the fenee corners and the
roadside are kept free it will be an
eawy matter to exterminate the unde
sirable weed poet* which are coming
to be a decMnfl problem. If you can
not dmg yoor rood, you can at least
have regard for your adja it field to
keep the weeds from growing along
the rondsRU.
MA1WTEWAWC6 OF HIGHWAYS.
Pastures of the tatroi 8ystsm to Keep
Roade III Good Condition.
The new etptfe highway commission
has i'.nupuneed thut it expects to adopt
the patrol system for the maintenance
of tho atat* an4 eouuty highways here-1
tofore tmpwed by state aid. This
will frivolv* the mainteimnce of a
force of ee»» lib j^axrqlaiea, u*th with
1
I £I*THit
1
a borne ntid cart and each assigned to
look after the repair of ten miles of
road. This system involves an ex
pense of .V) a year per mile of road
to be repaired. It has been success
fully followed out in keeping In con
dition improved highways in Massa
chusetts and in certain foreign coun
tries, and under the system the roads
are kept in such a state of elliciency
that much in the way of expensive re
pair work is avoided.
The commission has also voted to
establish immediately a bureau of re
search for the purpose of investigat
ing the vnrions methods of construc
tion In vogue in neighboring- states
and for conducting experiments with
a view to ascertaining the best form
of construction which will be adapted
to the present conditions, having in
mind es^KiClally the great damage
caused by automobile traffle.
FLORIDA SAWDUST ROADS.
Southern Expert Finds It Cheaper and
Best Material to Use.
They are making roads of sawdust
mixed with earth on a new plan in
Leon county, l'"la. Two ridges of earth
are thrown up with a road machine nt
the required width from each other,
and the space between is 111 led with a
six Inch bed of sawdust. This is fol
lowed with a smaller machine, which
plows up and mixes the earth with the
sawdust This makes a roadbed on
which the tires of the heaviest loaded
Tehlcles make no impression. The
contractor, G. II. Averitt. has kept an
accurate account of expenses in con
nection with this section of sawdust
and earth road and says the coot ag
gregates $297 a mile, showing It to be
about the cheapest road material In
ose.
It may be suggested that sawdust Is
not a durable material, but the Florida
True Democrat meets this objection
with tire statement that one or two
•neb roads were constructed In a south
Georgia county twenty years ago and
are stili in good condition, showing Its
durability. As is well known, Leon
county soil is clayey.
The Feather—A Game.
Having procured a small flossy feath
er, the players sit in a circle as closer,
ly together as possible. One of the'
party then throws the feather as high
as possible into tlie air, a&l It is the
duty of all tlie players to prevent It
from alighting on them by blowing at
it whenever it conies in their direction.
Any player whom it falls upoii must
ptf
a forfeit
0©©©®®©0®©®©©©®®®®©®®©0®
GUS BACH
WANTS TO SEE YOIJI
McCormick Binders, Mowers and
Twine also Plymouth Twine
Dempster Wind .Mills
Buggies of all kinds and descriptions.'"
Agent for International Gasolene eiT
gines and 1 oLaval Separators.
None better made.
©00®©©(S)©©©00©@©TO0C©@©©®ei
lon«rcssvwHue«iB
eimmMI
offers your money the protection
and security of its fire proof vaults,
burglar proof safe, electrical bur-
glar alarm, $25,000 capital and the
management of an efficient board
of directors.
tiURLGY DI^AY LI]Me
D. O. WARD« Proprietor.
All Orders Promptly Attended to and Goods
Carefully Handled
'. ..
MIDDLETON
Potor Nielsen has put up a new
windmill.
Eliza Brsvdberry is spending a fow
weeks with her niece, Mrs. R. O.
Hall, at Wakonda.
A dance was given in Peter Luden's
new barn last Saturday evening.
Estes Bagley returned home Fri
day from Thornton, Iowa, where
she has been working in a millinery
store.
Mrs. T. S. Moore is having a larg-1
barn built on her farm.
Mrs. James Rundell is visiting h-i*
daughter, Mrs. C. B. Stoddard.
Mrs. K. J. Webb and nieces re
turned to their home at Lancaster,-.
Wis., after a few weeks visit wilh
her sister Mrs. Alice Bradberry.
A book on Rheumatism, by l.'r,
Shoop, of Racine, Wise., tells so i.j
plain truthg, an in a plain and prac
ticle way. Get this booklet anu a
free trial treatment of Dr. Shoop'
Rheumatic Remedy for some dis
heartened sufferer in your vicinity.
Make a grateful and appreciate.»
friend of some one who is dh-vour
aged because of the failures of
others to help him. Help me tc
make this test, and I'll cennir.W
help your suffering friend, il. j.
Pier.
Any lady can get a silvered "N'o
Drip" Coffee strainer by writing
Dr. Shoop, Racine, Wis. Send
on S as
Drip" Coupon priviledye, givin.
your name and address. Dr. Sho^
will also send free his new and ver
interesting little book describing
Shoop's Health Coffee. He 1th Co
fee is such a close imitation of re
Coffee that it requires an !xpt rt
fell the difference. And neither ...
there a grain of real cfVee^n
Made from pure toasted, graij
malt aid nuts, its flavor and (.wJ
exceedingly gratifying. *o ted:
boiling either. "Made in mi"v
says Dr. Shoop. Writ toda
the
book
arid "No-Dn Cr.
Fawrup*Nftlson Co.
m.

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