Newspaper Page Text
DOCJTOB*. doctor w. a. kriesel Deutscher Arzt ?r Physician and Snrgaon [Chronic Ailments Diseases of [women and Children, given Special Attention, I Office over Banner Cothlng Store, Watertown, 8. D. IDE. R. M. BURLINGAME I Physician and Surgeon Bee 115 Vz E- Kemp Aye., over Ban ner Clothing Store fbones: Office 2436, House 2378 Hours: 9:30-12 1M5 7-8 H. J. BARTEON, M. D. Surgeon In Charge WATERTOWN 8ANITAR1UM aeral Surgery Bye, Ear, Note and Throat Glasses Wtted. Jfflce ftnd Residence tn Hospital. Phone 2165. J. S. KILBRIDE, WL D. All calls promptly answered.. Seneral Medicine and Surgery. cial attention given to diseases at Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Glasses Fitted. bne 2448 Office Century Blk. DENTI8T8. 0. STUTENROTH, D. D. «. DENTAL OFFICII Over First National Bank Watertown, 3. -O DE. M. WATSON Dentist Block Watertown Phone 2250 LAWYEES CASE & OASEfVgg LAWYERS %, fcnite Block Watertown, S. D. W. Case Howard B. Case Claude E. Case, Collections Law Offices of PEEEY F. LOUCKS |}te 200, 201, 202, 203, 204, 211, 212, 213, Stokes Building. Watertown, S. Dak. (uipped and organized to handio and every item of legal and ct/i Ition business. .. MlSOELLANEOUg 5RICKELL CONSTRUCTION COMPANY fcSKtVtCTB, CONTRACTORS AND BUILDER8 Plana and Estimates Furnished. Ace and shops 114 1st Ave. 8. W Phone 248# WELSH'S CAFE Best place In town to eat. [lean and up-to-date. Quick service. Meals at All Hours. |ome once and you'll come again. ARCADE HOTEL jon European Plan fhen tne city try our bedr. Good an beds, 50c. Prices Right. ___ L. T. THOMPSON, Proprietor!"" HE'S DRAY, TEANSF1B LINE AND STORAGE JM* SKINNER, Prof. Office 818 East-Kemp Avenue IE NORTHWESTERN HOTEL Geo. R. Church, Prop. ates 11.26 per Day Meals SB* lie best hotel of Its clajto In tre city, or. 1st 3t and 1st Av«nue N. W Phone 2230 FRANK BENNETT BAGGAGE AND DRAY LINE Piano and 8afe, Moving. Storage. 17 2nd St. N. silt Iorder YOUR Phone SST« Some Man's Wife. "Pa, who started the saying that I man's wife Is his better- half?" l"Some mans' wife, I reckoif."— louston Post in CoftfcE SPICES lEztraota, Baking Powder of GRAND UNION TEA CO. F. I. Thompson, Agaat, |®«h Waiertowa, SJ. THE PANITORIUM A. M. CLARK, Prop. Cleantafg 'pPnssfig Repairing i%: Done as you went it dome, whan yoxi want it Ipeda! Attention to Ladita Phone 2308 ?"*. I We eall for and deliv®l|| mm Copyright, 1014, bv Doubleday, Pntfe &• Company PROLOGUE. Nowhere has Booth Tar* kingtgn done such finished, exquisite work as in this story of boyhood. The full flavor of Ms story is not only for the grown man or woman, bat for any one who enjoys the ootnio muse. It is a picture of a boy's heart, full of those lovable, hu morous, tragic things which are locked secrets to older folks unless one has the gift of understanding. Booth Tarkington has it eminently, and "Penrod" will stand as a classic interpretation of the omnipresent subtlety— BOY. II CHAPTER ifj* "A Boy and His Dog. TONROD sat morosely upon the back fence and gazed with envy at Duke, his wistful dog. A bitter soul dominated the va rious curved and angular surfaces known by a careless world as the face of Penrod Schofleld. Except in soli tude, that face was almost always cryptic and emotionless, for Penrod had come Into his twelfth year wear ing an expression carefully trained to be Inscrutable. Since the world was sure to misunderstand everything, mere defensive instinct prompted him to give it as little as possible to lay hold upon. Nothing Is more impene trable than the face of a boy who has learned this, and Penrod's was habitu ally as -fathomless as the depth of hiS' hatred this morning for the literary activities of Mrs. Lora Bewbush, an almost universally respected fellow citizen, a lady of charitable and poetic inclinations and one of his own moth er's most intimate friends. Mrs. Lora Bewbush had written something which she called "The Children's Pageant of the Table Bound," and It was to be performed in public that very afternoon at the Women's Arts and Guild hall for the benefit of the Colored Infants' Better ment society. And If any flavor Of sweetness remained In the nature of Penrod Schofleld after th« dismal trials of the school week just past, that problematic. Infinitesimal rem* nant was made pungent acid by the imminence of his destiny to form a prominent feature of the spectacle and to declaim the loathsome sentiments of character named upon the pro gram the Child Sir Lancelot After each rehearsal he had plotted escape, and only ten days earlier there had been a glimmer of light Mrs. Lora Rewbush caught a very bad cold, and it was hoped it might develop into pneumonia, but she recovered so quick ly that not 'even a rehearsal of^the Children's Pageant was: postponefl Darkness closed In. Penrod had rather vaguely debated plans for a self muti lation such as would make his ap pearance as the Child Sir Lancelot In expedient on public grounds. It was ,a heroic and attractive thought, but the results of. some extremely sketchy preliminary experiments Caused him to abandon It. There was no escape, and at last his hour was hard upon him. Therefore be brooded oh the fence and gassed with envy at his wistful Duke. The dog's name was undescrlptive of his person, which was obviously the result of a singular series of mes alliances. He wore a grizzled mus tache and indefinite whiskers. He was small and shabby and looked like an old postman. Penrod envied Duke because he was *ure Duke would.nev er be compelled to be a Child Sir Lancelot. He thought a dog free and unshackled to go or come as the wind Ileteth.!-' Penrod forgot the life he led Duke. Jfhere was a long soliloquy upon the fence, a plaintive monologue without words.. The boy's thoughts were ad-, Jectives, but they were expressed by a running film of pictures In his mind's, -eye, morbidly prophetic of the hldeosl-. ttes before h}m Finally he spoke •aloud, with such spleen that Duke-rose frot$ his haunches and ttftefl one ear in k^en anklet?. ,v„ •1 bight Sir Lancelot dp-,.Lake, tl» cWMjj Gentul bearted, meek anil mUd. What though Vw but a Ilttxri child, Omtul hearted, toeek and— Oof!" A'l of this except wodf was a quota- fi 1 tion from the Child Sir Lancelot, as conceived by Mrs. Lora Bewbush. Choking upon it, Penrod slid down from the fence, and with slow and thoughtful steps entered a one storied wing of the stable, consisting of a sin gle apartment, floored with cement and used as a storeroom for broken bric-a-brac, old paint buckets, decayed garden hose, woraout carpets, dead furniture and other condemned odds and ends not yet considered hopeless enough to be given away. In one corner stood large box, a part of the building itself it was eight feet high and open at the top, and it had been constructed as a sawdust magazine from which was drawn ma terial for the horse's bed in a stall on the other side of the partition. The big box, so high and towerlike, so com modious, so suggestive, had ceased to fulfill its legitimate function, though providentially it had beep at least half full of sawdust when the horse died. Two years had gone by since that pass ing, an Interregnum in transportation during 'Which Penrod's father was "thinking" (he explained sometimes) of an automobile. Meanwhile, the gifted and generous sawdust box had served brilliantly in war and peace it was Penrod's stronghold. There was a partially defaced sign upon the front wall of the box the donjon deep had knoWn mercantile Im pulses: The O. K. RaBIT CO. -PENBOD ScHoFlBLD AND COl: INQulKB FOB PBlcBs. This was a venture of the preceding vacation, and had .netted at one time an accrued and owed profit of $1.38. Prospects had been brightest on the very eve of cataclysm. The storeroom was locked and guarded, but twenty seven rabbits and Belgian hares, Old and young, had perished here on a sin gle night—through no human agency, but In a foray of cats, the besiegers treacherously tunnelling up through the sawdust from the small aperture which opened Into the stall beyond the partition. Commerce has Its martyrs. Penrod climbed upon a. barrel, stood on tiptoe, grasped the rim of the box then, using a knothole as a stirrup, threw one leg over the top, drew him self up and dropped within. Standing upon the packed sawdust, he was just tall enough to see oyer the top. Duke had not followed him into the storeroom, but remained near the open "Eleva-terl" shouted Penrod. •. Tlng tins!" doorway 1n a concave 'fcntf^pissltniBtife attitude -Penrod felt In a dark corner of the box And laid hands upon a simple apparatus consisting of an did bushel basket with a few yards of clothesline' tied to each of its handles. H^ passed the ends of the lines over a big spool, which revolved upon an axle of wire suspended from a beam overhead, and, with the aid of tills im provised pulley, lowered the empty basket until It,came tojrest in aa.on. right position -upon the floor of the -storeroom at box, of yHTarSrfl *hi IATUIPAY KKW* watbktowh, i, t, ^eva^rrilitl Penrot#tong ttogl""*!: Dukeii 'rtd and IntoUigenUsc appre hensive, approached slowly, ltt* semi circular manner, deprecatlngly, hut with courtesy. He pawed tha lmket delicately, then, as 4f that were all "his piaster had expected of him, uttered oha bright bhrk, sat down and-looked up trlun^hautiy- His hyprocriay was shallow, many a horrible-Quarter of an hour had t&ught him his is this matter. "El-e-vay-ter!" shouted/ Penrod stern ly.- "You want me to come down there to you?" Duke looked suddenly haggard. He pawed the basket feebly again and, upon another outburst from on high, prostrated himself flat Again threat ened, he gave a superb' impersonation of a worm. "You get in that el-e-vay-ter!" Reckless with despair, Duke lumped into the basket, landings a disheveled posture, which he' did not alter until he bad been drawn up and poured out upon the floor of" sawdust within the box. There, shuddering, he lay In doughnut shape and presentiy slnmber «d. It was dark in the box, a conditlon that might have been remedied by slid ing back a small wooden panel on run ners, which would have let In ample light from the alley,: but Penrod Scho fleld had more Interesting means of illumination- He knelt, and from a former soup box,. In a corner, took a lantern without a chimney and a large oil can,, the leak in-the latter being so nearly imperceptible that its banish ment from household use bad seemed to Penrod as inexplicable as it was providential. He shook the lantern near his ear nothing splashed there was no sign but a dry clinking' But there was plenty of kerosene In the can, and he filled the lantern, striking a match to illumine the operation. Then he lit the lantern and hung it upon a nail against the wall. The sawdust floor was slight ly Impregnated with oil, and the open fianie quivered in. suggestive proximity to the side of the box however, some rather deep charrlngs of the plank against which the lantern hung offered evidence that the arrangement was by no means a new one and indicated at least a possibility of a® fatality oc curring this time. Next Penrod turned up the surface of the sawdust in another corner of the floor and drew forth a cigar box in which were half a dozen cigarettes made of hayseed and thick brown wrapping paper, a lead pencil,, an eraser and a small notebook labeled "English Grammar. Penrod Scho fleld. Boom 6, Ward School Nomber Seventh," The first page Of this book was pure-, ly academic, but the study of English undeflled terminated with a slight jar at the top of the second: "Nor must an adverb be used to modif—• Immediately followed: "HABoLD RAMoBEZ THE HoAD AGBNT OB WILD LUPET^MoNCls is THE BOCKY MTS.'* And the subsequent entries in th«: book ai^eared to have little concern! with Boom 8, Ward School Nomber Seventh. 7 The author of "Harold Bamorez," etc., lit one of the hayseed cigarettes, seated himself comfortably, with his back against the wall and his right shoulder just under the lantern, ele vated his knees to support the note book, turned to a blank page and wrote, slowly and earnestly: "CHAPITEB TH® SIXTH" He took a knife from his pocket, and, broodingly, his eyes upon the inward embryos of vision, sharpened his pen cil. After that he extended a foot and meditatively rubbed Duke's back with the side of his shoe. Creation, with Penrod, did hot leap, full armed, from the brain but finally he began to produce. He wrote very slowly at first, and then with Increasing rapid ity, faster and faster, gathering mo mentum and growing more and more fevered as he sped, till at last the true fire came, without which no lamp of real literature may be made to burn. Mr. Wilson reohed for his gun but our hero had him fovred and soon said Well I truass you don't come any of that on me my frelnd. ... Well what makes you so sure about It sneered the other bitting his lip so uav ageley that the blood ran You are noth ing but a comon Roadagent any way and I do not propose to be balled by sttoh, Ramorez laughed at this and kep Mr. Wilson oovred by his ottomatick. Soon the two men- were struggling to gether In the deathroes but soon Mr. Wil son got him bound «nd gaged his mouth and went away for awhile le&vln our hero. It was dark and he writhd at his bonds writhing on the floor wile the rats came out of their boles and bit hfan and vermin got all over, him from the floor of that heUsh spot but soon he monged to Plish the gag out of his mouth with the end of his toungeu and got all his bonds off Soon Mr Wilson came back to tant him With his helpless condition flowed by. Ills gang of detectives and they Said Oh look at Ramorez sneering at his plight and tknted 'him with his heiplers -condition because Ramorez had 'put tlie bonds back sos he would look the same but could throw them off him when his 'Wanted to Just look at him now sneered they.. To hear bim talk you would thought he Was hot stuff and they said Look at him now, hitn that was going to do so much. Oh I would not like to tie in his fix Soon Harold got mad at'thls and Jump ed up with biasing eyes throwln off his bondsllke they^were air Ha Ha snesred he I guess you.fetter not talk so. much next time. Soon there flowed another awful struggle and Elezlji his ottomatick back from Mr. Wflson he4 shot two of''the detectives through the heart Blng Bing Went the ottomatick and two more went to meet their Maker only two detectives left now and so he stabbed, one end the scondrel went to meet bis Maker for now our hero was fighting for very life. It was dark in there now for nlgbt had Calen and a terrible view met the eye Blood was just all over everything and the rate -were eatln the dead men. 7 Soon our hero manged to get his back tp the.-wall'tor he was flghtlng for his -very life now and shot Mr. Wilson through the abodmen Ohx said Mr Wilson Mr Wilson stagerd back vile oaths he osme.near our heros .liead with not mtated him and reaurnd stuck in the w»!l OiuMieros amumltlon 'Wa* exbaased what was he to. do, the remanln scondrel wo£)4 soon «et his ax lose so our hero sprung forward' and bit htm SU his teeth met in the flech for now ^uP hertf was fightin# for his very/'llfe At- this the renmshi scondrel also cursed and: swot's vile oaths Oh sneered he— ytru Iiarold Bamores what did you bite, me for TeS: sneered Mr Wilson also and be has -«hbt tne in the abodmen too Soon they were both oursln and reviln him together Why, sneered they what did you want to Injure us -fnr Why, ypu Harold Ramores yo*» have not got uiy senoe and you. think yOU are so much but you are no better-than anybody else Soon our hero could stand this no longer If you could leaij* to act like gentlmen said he I would not'do any more to you now and., your low vile expprestons have not got... any effect on me, only to injure yOur own self when you go to meet your Maker Oh I guess you have hsjd enoaft for one day and I think you'have learned a lesson and will not soon 'attoip to beard Harold Bamores again so with a tanting laugh he cooly lit,a cigarrete.and takln the keys of the cell from Mr Wilson poket went on out S6H- in his Ups for he was in pain, Why you Soon Mr Wilson and the-wonded deteo tlve mangd to bind up their wonds' and got up off the floor It I will have ,that dasstads life now sneered they if we have to .swing for It he shall not, -eecape us again. a-... Chapiter seventh A mule train of- heavily laden burros laden with gold from t}»e mines wa* to be seen wondering among the highest olifts and gorgs of the Booky Mts and a tali man with a long silken muatash and a cartidge belt could be heard oursln vile oaths, because he well knew this was the lair of Harold Bamores Why you mean old mules you sneered he because the poor mules were not able to go any quicker for him -I will show you Why it sneered lie his oaths growing viler and viler I will whip you sos you will not be.able to walk for a week you mean old mules you Scarcly had the vile words left his lips when "Penfodl" It WAS his The rapt look faded slowly. He sighed, but moved not "Penrod! We're having lunch early just on your account, so yonll have plenty of time to be dressed for the pageant Hurry!" There was silence in Penrod's aerie. "Pen-rod!" Mrs. Schofield's voice sounded near er, indicating a threatened approach. Penrod bestirred himself. He blew out the lantern and shouted plaintively:: "Well, ain't I coming fast's I cany "Do hurry," returned the voice, with drawing, and the kitchen door oectld be heard to close. Beplaclng his manuscript and pencil In the cigar box, he carefully burled the box in the sawdust, put the lan tern and oil can back in the soap box, adjusted the elevator for the recep tion of Duke, and in no" uncertain tone invited the devoted animal to enter, Duke stretched himself amiably, af fecting not to hear and when this pre tense became so obvious that even a' dog could keep -it up no longer sat down in a corner, facing it his back to his master and his head perpendicular, nose upward, supported by the con vergence of the two walls. This from a dog is the flst word, the comble of the immutable. Penrod command ed, stormed, tried gentleness, persuad ed with honeyed words and pictured rewards. Duke's eyes looked back ward otherwise he moved not Time elapsed. Penrod stooped to flattery, finally to insincere caresses then, los ing patience, spouted sudden threats. "Penrod, come down, from that box this instant!" "Ma'am?" /.'Are you up iif that sawdust box ajgnin?" As Mrs. Schofleld bad just heard her son's voice issue from the box and also as she knew he was there anyhow, her question must have been put for oratorical purposes only. "Be cause If you are," she continued promptly, "I'm going to ask your papa ftot to let you play there any"— Penrod's forehead, his eyes, the tops of his ears and most of his hair be came visible to her at the top of the box. "I ain't 'playingr ,!:.. s^r- rMwsjssgriQ. *N -1 wra# WP %ou snewed he I wIU get you y* (STATEMENT OF THE «0MlTIO1M Thfe remainln scondrel had Cn •x «lil3i i', *.he FftrffiW# voice catling mother's from the back porch. Simultaneously the noon whistles be gan to blow far and sear, and the ro mancer in the sawdust box, summon ed prosaically from Steep mountain passes above the clouds, paused -with stubby pencil halfway from lip to knee. His eyes were shlnlngv there was a rapt sweetiiess in his gaze. As he wrote his burden had grown light er,' thoughts of Mrs. Lora Bewbush had almost leftblm, and in particular as he recounted (even by the chaste dash) the annoyed expressions of Mr. Wil son, the Wounded detective, and the silken moustached mule drlveb, he bad felt mysteriously relieved concerning the Child Sir Lancelot Altogether he looked a better and. a brighter boy: "Pen-rod!" 'tonatness' on 2Sird day of Jitne,' Ovwdrtitts ^85W. Iat and SJ. Bxpens© Banking House and Fixtures aOflJKfc Enw from banks* *10^937^ CurrencS^ $1,40 S,i Gold 6 suvQk Minor Coin ,^8,56 1.8S0.W Cash, items m7 it Total pasb, AasetaJWfio Total ,.?70v Liabilities. Capital Stock Surplus Fond BMnd Total St^te of" Sduih Dakota. Codington, ss. I, F. H. Kluekman, cashfer. of the Above named bank, do solemnly swear -that the above staj«men& Correct Attest: John Stricherz, Edward Lamm. ,'J6" he said in dignantly. Well, what are you doing?" Just coming down," he replied in ft grieved but patient tone. "Then why don't you come?" .' "I got Duke here. I got to get bim down, haven't I? Yon don't suppose I want to leave'a poor' dog in here to. starve, do you?" "Well, hand him down over the side to me. Let me"— "I'll get him down all right" said Penrod. "I got him up here and I guess 1 can get him down." "Well then, do it" '•'I will if you'U let me alone. If you'll go on back to the house' I promise to be there inside of two minutes. Honest" After her departure Penrod expend ed some finalities of eloquence upon] Duke, then disgustedly gathered him. up in his arms, dumped him into the basket and, shouting sternly, "All in fpr the--ground floor—step back there,?, madam—all ready, Jim!" lowered dog and basket to the floor of the store room, Duke sprang out In tumultuous/ relief, and bestowed frantic affection upon his masfer as the latter slid from the box, *55-00. Minor Coin ^33.43 1,399.43 Total 14,53^8 CftftliEi Assets 25^ ^*1 Total ttabllltles. Capital Stock w,.»... Surplus Fund. 300.00 Undivided Profits- 846.22 Bills Payable -$s00Q,Q0 Deposits Subject to Check $14,826.0T Savings Deposits. 1,030.4® Cashier's Checks 186.0ft Time Certificates 19,451.20' Total ,, ?'M mem. ,y i,9ao.69 .35,493.73 ?Mf f'f Total $48,639.95 TotalS $48,639.95 State of South Dakota, County of .. Codington, ss. I, .A. Fromket cashier of the above named bank, do solemnly swear that the above statement Is true to the best flf My knowledge and belief. H. A. Fromke, Cfwht^r. Correct, Attest: 1 Geo. K. Burt O. O. Frink. .tmS-f Subscribed and sworn tFUefors sie this Srd day of July, 1916. John D. Burt, Notary Public. My commission expires April 14, 1918 Tb« Expositions in C«liforad«—-fl* Panama-California Exposition at Sao Dlago.a&dtht Panama-Pacifto Inter* national Exposition at Sin FfinolM& effar the greatast opportunity ror pr» Mnted to th« American peopla to m« •omathing of their ovn country. Chtrfc* of routes, vith numbwr pi limited trains to cbooae from, inoltadlng the famoua "Golden State Umited, "Rockjr Mountain Umited" and "Cat Ifornlan." Low iaret for round trip. Liberal stopper privileges. Long r*» turn Umit.fjfffii1 Get a copy of our folder an tne Pan* ama Expositions. Tells youhmp g» and what you can nee^x Our repreMDtatives "lire traTefisipMrly and who will h«lp you plan wonderful Oil of eeonondoal oufing, givo you full infonnatlM and took alter ovary detail of jppur 1% Finest Modern Iv"" All'Steel Eqaipmeni For tickets, renerra*, tion and lnfono«p tion see WM. MITCHELL, Agent Watertown, 8, D, SUMMONS. V. County State of South Dakota, Codington, ss. 7. In Circuit Court, Third" Judicial .Cir cuit. Perry LouckB, Plaintiff, vs. Al- phonse Paradis, George $r Kemp Jff. B. Laird, "W. A. Granger, and ^rarm L^nd Security^Company, a 1 or interest or Hen or im brtmce Upon the premises wl thfe CttWrtatefe Deftmd3nlr.w -«t 'tSk?uih Dnkutai to"'" above Mpred D6ftndwit», You arfr sutnfisonwi mArtfi to Btwwvt! t&ei Ctnmteint Flateilff, which war lllod in »ent.«iaietl|^ th ttgaiWlt th« J^fflni !oi^piaInt, 4ptaAtil to-yeiti fjm NilM^en i#d 20),^Bloclc Add^snto Lots, 'tfhtrtyf ev«i UO.OQfcOft 8MLOO 233B,ia fymm Undivided Profit# Bills Payable Deposits Subject to Check *10,5*1.61 Cashier's Checks 693.13 Time Certificates 40.B58.95 stmtow Total' ,.P0j408,81 County p& Mi l«^' dfeewtted Itt .tid lb said "CC'intj -EVs«litqeni? of Watertown'ij vthe rlfl true to the ,host of my knawiedge wad belief. H. Kbtakman, Caakter. Subscribed and sworn jtoi before me this 6th day of July, 1915: :'M afe. Han^aai®® Notary Public. My commissiohr'iSipireaS July 14, 1917 STATEMENT OF TMfi, CONDITION of the State Ban* of CSswrer, Gro ver, Sf D„ at the das^ftt busings on .Tune i3rd, ISIfe Resoufoetb: Loans and Discoumts .181,682,82 Overdrafts Expense .. .i, Banking Fixtures Due from Banks ?lJk&43.81 Checks and.Qrsfltft for Clearing ..98.78 Currency .$588.00 Gold .i' ,-., 115.00 Silver 101.91 1,245.35 1,075.75 bud th^t if-^you fall to. appear ana answer thfeaaid complaint wlthin that tourt ma, the platotlff win ftpplv to the relief desnanded In th^t Complalak ', Datedn*t mtertown4 S. D„ this 224 day, of JSna' .iSlS. a Perry F, Loucks, and (FlrEft apb. Jul. 1 last pub Aug uzgt 'Jw summons. Dated at ^Watertown, S. ti 10th day of Jyme, A. D. 1916.^' Per»y F. Loucte^ Ai^Ulur H. HaBche, Attorneys for Plalntlit, (First pub, Jtine 24 last pub. July 29^' NOTICE FOfl ftP MORTGAGE CtOSURE 8ALE. Notice is hereby, given that fault h«i accrued in the conditions the mortgage hereinafter deBc in that the mortgagors have to pay the principal and thts inter^lit when, due or at all that $he iraort gaga referred to was executed aud deliT^ed by Andrew C. Gayman eiud Carrie O. Gayman, his wife, to H.'D, Walrath of .Watertowtt, South Dako ta, who is the present owner and holder thereof, which mortgage is deted January 22nd, 190!!, is for the sum of 11,200,00, and has been d«fc tince January 22nd, 1904 that thefa to now due and owing Apon. said mortgage, principal and interest, the sum of One Thousand Three Hundred Sixteen Dollars Sixty-uve Cents ($1,316.65) that the property^ de scribed in said mortgage is Lot. Twelve (12) in Block Thirty-flVe (85) in the Second Hallway Addition to Watertown South Dakota tnat said mortgage ww filed for record th the oflSlce of the Register of Deeds of Codington County, South Dakota on January 28rd, 1902, at' 10:15 o'clock a. m., and recorded in book 64 of Mortgages at page 478 that no ac tion or other proceeding at law or equity has been commenced to. col lect said debt or foreclose said .mort gage. That said mortgage will be' fore closed and the property above de scribed will- be sold to satisfy the said debt and costs at the front deor of the court house in the city of Wa tertown, South Dakota, on th« 24 th day of July, 1915, at two -o'clock m., to the„hjghp8t bidder for cn6fc Si Walrath, Mortgagee. (First pub. June 17 last pub July 22) "Summonses State of South Dakota, County Codington. In Circuit Court, Third Judicial Cir cult. S. H. Ohtness, Plaintiff, vs. Hans O. Holm, Catherine P, Stedman, R. T. Toung, and Samuel J. Brickell, De fendants.- The State of South Dakota- to the "above named defendant^:- You, and each of you, *re hereby summoned, and required to answer the complaint of the plaintiff,: which was filed in the office of tne Clerk of this Court, at Watertown, ,Jn- Coding ton County, South Dakota, m- the 27th day of May, 1915, find which prays for a. judgment quieting tne title to, and the determination of all adverse claims"against the premisaB^described in the complaint, situated int said county, towwit: lots 13 and 14, in block 17, of the original towr|iof Wa tertown, and to eerve a oopy ot J%-)t' SSaf al XSfly ,, Codington CWufar, kv& t^e tii%^AdVurs» •3 .V nff $t6satf »3- A ,f, Thirtriglit Jj. lij {set and S8k BlOOk Two, uad Loft 'T I Twenty-Seven .JOT) xtf Slock Ten (M1 bt' of Bloolc-'. .. ...... to the City -of. "Watertown, County GDdingt^i, Stiybe of' South Dakota, as' plaited and recorded in raid County and Stftte, and to serve a copy pf your anawer to said Complaint on the «Rderslgned, at their offlfces ln thw Stokes Building to the City Oy-^aterv town, Codingfeoa County, S &, with in, thirty days after the conQVtcd service 01 tliis Summons upon ou exclusive of r-X your answer to said complaint, oti' tbie un dersigned at their office in the city of Watertown, within thirty days af ter the completed service of this summons upon you, exclusive of the day. of such service and it yOU fall to answer said 6omp%ui within that time, the plaintiff^fHu appjijr to the court for tfce /eliet ji^anded Jn the, -CO»ipWnt,: -fe-• A/k *'SheM 3 1 day of such spnrtoat ki «i r! 7 C?arstoa Eggen, Atorneys for Plaintiff, & County «f States of South Dakota, Codjngttm,' is, ', In Circuit Court,* Third Judicial PJ^lntlif, vs. Ora Daniel SI, HJ§ Bi Hall, Defendant. Stete- of South Dakota, to the ai»v%i named defendant: §W:WM wMm I 5» T- imL SJH J- Xr --v JCi. •I X. jt t$ You are hereby summoned and re? «aif9d to answer the Ccmplatnt of: tlte above named Plaintiff,, which is:: isn- file in the office of the C^erk" or Circuit Court, igttiingtoni CounW, South Dakota, and to serve a copy est "Vour answer on the- subscribers heir office in the City of WatertoWtMg odtngt6p County, South Dakota, •Within thirty iaya from the date of Service heteof upon you, exclusive of the day of puch service, and that If you fail to -«o appear and answer fti&i aforesaid,' the said" Plaintiff will ap--"| ply to fha Court ftof the relief pray^ for in th^ Cotikplalttt. "IV-" *Z% •18 jfiaw8a»'. Jl -is4- v1!