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m-" W1 IV 1* Pis lis® %§£V 15S.v- f* i® P5& fj' VS« -. W$$b W 4i W f-y( -s" HV £5Jr« |p£ E*" r- ft Pc a £n I W//' & .' vv (ft. & %t H. A. ELMQUIST, D. D. S. is permanently located in ,.• Elkhorn and prepared to do all kinds of dental work. Opposite John Peterson's. ELKHORN, IA. Pettr Miller, of Elkhorn, spent Sunday iu Kitnballlon visiting his pareuts. Mr. and Mrs. Eric, Hansen, of Elk horn, had their infant child baptized last Monday. Joe James and Jens R. Hansen, of Elkhorn, went to Harlan Monday to transact official business. George Heuniugsen, the plasterer at Elkhorn, was down to Kimballton on Monday transacting business. I* have one of the best Registered Short-horn bulls in the county for sale one year old. J. C. HARDMAN A big baby boy is reported at the home of Gieger Gregersen up bv Elk horn, putting iu its appearance, last Wednesday. Miss Arilseh, who taught in the college the past winter, began Mon day to teach iu the public schools, two miles south of town. Chris Vinding, who purchased the home belonging to Axel Jensen out in Kimballton, is having a neat barn put up to accommodate his renter. The directors of the old lumber company, in Kimballton, helda meet ing, Saturday, to invoice their stock of lumber on haud to the new firm. The best canned fruit you ever bought for the price, 20c. Canned goods to go at 12ic per can. J. F. JENSEN, Kimballton. M. H. Madsen and wife went out to Nebraska, last Thursday, to visit at the home of Rev. C. C. Sorensen, for mer pastor of the church at Kimball ton. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew NelsoD, who were recently married, were in Elk horn last week and purchased their household goods to begin their new home. Miss Solvijg Thompson, who has been visiting friends in and around Kimballton for sone time, departed, Monday, for her home at Maiquette, Nebraska. Jens Jensen, one of the farmers around Kimballton, purchased of M. N. Esbeck & Company one of their best buggies last week and now takes the world easv. Miss Christena Jensen, who has been assistant cook at the college, dur ing the past winter, went to the home of Petersen's, Monday, to as sist thein for a time. Peter Christensen, who lives near Kimballton, thinks the summer sun would not behalf so hot if he is in the shade so purchased a buggy, last week, of M. N. Esbeck & Company. The public schools, of Elkhorn, opened Monday with Magnus Peter sen of Harlan and Martha StefFesen as teachers. They are both enthusiastic teachers and will give a good terms work. J. C. Jensen, better known as "Thresher Chris," is now assisting in the implement store of S. C. Peder sen & Company, in Elkhorn to help (hem to get out their big supply of goods. Rev. Sorft, of Nysted, Nebraska, was visiting friends in and about It MOLANE.LLI. J.* WA 3^ ELKnORn Kimballton last week and on Sunday held services in the Kimballton church, much to the delight of the audience. Please remember that I have receiv ed a nice line of Dry Goods for spring and summer. Also a line ofUp-to^ date Hate, Gloves and Shoes which will be sold at the lowest price possi ble. J. P. JENSEN. School began, Tuesday, in the pub lic school at Kimballton with Profes' sor Ned Wood and wife as instructors. Both are well known to the public in Kimballton and they feel assured of a very successful term. Rev. Hald. from the Oak Hill church, near Brayton, was over to Kimballton, Monday, and preached to a good sized audience. The day was cold and blustering but the church was well filled and he gave them a good sermon. Mrs. Chris Iversen went down to Atjantic Monday where she will re main a couple of weeks and visit friends and then depart for Blair, Nebraska, where she has a son in the schools, studying for the ministry. The members of the Elkhorn church were much disappointed, Monday, when they received word from Rev. P. L. C, Hansen, who lives in Oregon that he could not accept the call they extended to him, so they will have to select someone el6e. M. N. Esbeck & Company, the im plement men, of Kimballton, have had a tremendous trade in their line this spring. They have sold nearly everything they have and have even ordered more for some of their pat rons. They are well pleased with the year as it is going beyond their ex pectations. Rasmus Heidegaard, the nursery man from Elkhorn, was in Kimball ton, Monday, attending to business. While there he purchased of Hans Johnson eight acres on the west of Kimballton, paying $120.00 per acre for the same. That seems a tremen dous price but he will realize a good sum on his investment. Andrew Anderson, well known to everyone around Kimballton, has ac cepted a position with J. C. Jensen and will begin next Monday to clerk in the store. Andrew has kept books for the various firms in Kimballton tha past few years and is competent and perfectly reliable and honest. Everyone who knows him trusts him and he will prove a valuable assistant iu the store. James Johnson, son of Hans John son, in Kimballton, came home last week to visit a few days and Monday departed again for Dex.tea, where he is attending school. James has a good record behind him in the school as be ing at the head of his class and too is carrying more studies than any of them and they had a good long start of nim in regular attendance at school. But he simply shows by being first what hard work will do. We do not claim to beat all plows, but we give satisfaction and do as good work as any. M. N. ESBECK & COMPANY The 6hare holders of the new lum ber company, in Kimballton. held their first meeting last Saturday and elected their manager. After a lively vote with Andrew Anderson and Torvel Jensen as candidates for the po sition of secretary the latter was elected. He is well known to the peo ple around Kimballton as he has been one of the biggest carpenter contract ors in the country. He thoroughly understands lumber and will make a good man for the position. Word came out to Elkhorn Sunday from Harlan of the death of Hannah is CONCEDED that the riding plows will do the best work. The old time idea, that they run heavy has been exploded and everyone knows they run easy, do good work, cover more weeds, throws dirt up hill better and save more steps than anything going. I A O N I O W A 1' S&Us, Vegetable Lydia •mm-. :.!i "I wish you to publish my letter stating the grant! of foot LYDIA Cm PINK HAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND has had on my heaithm Em Konian, who passed away that morn ing with pneumonia. The deceased is the daughter of Peter Koman, who lives west of Elkhorn, and had only been in Harlan a short time, where she had gone to learn the dressmak ing trade. She was a bright young woman, who hud just passed the age of accountability and was beloved (f all who knew her. She had grown from childhood into the fulness of womanhood, surrounded by thise comforts of life that refine' and puri fied her disposition so that she shed abroad a loving light to all who came in contact with her. The funeral took place Tuesday and in the cemetery where the grave can be watched and tenderly cared for she now rests in sweet and solemn peace. I waseuffering to such an extent from ovarian trouble that my physician thought an operation would be necessary. Your medicine having been recommended to me, I decided to try it. After using several bottles I found that I was cured. My system was toned up and I suffered no more with my ovaries. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is the greatest boon on earth to suffering women.MRS. ANNA ASTON, BOX 13, Troy, Mo. Ovarian trouble is serious trouble. Every woman knows this. Frequently she has ovarian trouble when she thinks she has only a pain in the side." All at once she finds herself unable to walk. She is a sick woman. An operation, dangerous and expensive, is the usual procedure, and, at best, she can expect merely to gather together the shattered remnants of health after a tedious struggle. Ruuning sorea, ulcere, boilsT'pimpTes, etc., quickly cured by BANNER SALVE, the most healing salve iuthe world. A sure cure for piles. Nick Doffig &Co. Many times this is necessary and many times it is not. It is wise for every woman to be convinced that every backache and sideache, every abdominal pain, indicates something wrong, and something which will not go away itself or be driven away by hard work. It is also right for every woman to know that for every disorder of the feminine organs Compound Getting Into Moral Debt. Read the records of cure in the letters like Mrs. Aston's printed regularly in this paper, and if you are sick, do not be satisfied to take a substitute for Philip D. Armour, millionaire and philanthropist, continually warned young men against getting into debt. He loved free men and despised slaves. When asked if he admired a certain brilliant orntor, he said: "He may have a superb voice and fine presence, but can't you hear the rattle of his chain? That man Is not free. He is under moral obligations that demoralize him. He is not speaking the deepest thing in his soul, and 1 haven't time to hear any elavt talk. I want a man to be just as free as I am." On another occasion he said: "Don't get into debt—I mean moral debt. It Is bad enough to get into debt finan cially. There goes a young man who is mortgaged. That young man is log ging it along with a debt, and it will take twice as much power to get him along as the man without a debt. There are other debts and obligations that are embarrassing in their entan glements. Don't get Into debt morally, my boy don't get into debt so that you may not exercise your freedom .to its How About Your Heart Feel your pulse a few minutes. Is it regular? Are you short of breach, after slight exertion as going up stairs, sweeping, walking, etc? Do you have pain in left breast, side or between shoulder blades, chok ing sensations, fainting or smothering spells, inability to lie on left side? If you have any of these symptoms you certainly have a weak heart, and should immediately take Heart Cure Miles' Mr. F. H. Oaks of Jamestown, N. Y.t whose genial face appears above, says: "Excessive use of tobacco seriously affected my heart. I suffered severe pains about the heart, and in the left shoulder and side while the palpitation would awaken me from my sleep. I began taking Dr. Miles' Heart Cure ana Eoon found permanent relief." 8old by all Druggists, Or. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind. A Jjydia E. Pinkham's is the perfect treatment, that it is the medicine always safe to use and alwayB certain to help. When your health and perhaps your life is at stake, is .it wise to pass by a remedy which holds the record for the greatest number of absolute cures of female ills and which is recognized by the profession to be the greatest medicine for women in the world, and accept something else which you know little or nothing about? Pinkham's Vogotahio Compound» DCUf ABB! We have deposited with Keif Anil the National City Bank, of l,ynn, is.ooo, which will be pala to any per* son who can find that the above testimonial letter is not genuine, or was published before obtaining the writer's special permission. iTSIi S. PLNKHAM MEDICINB CO. PERFUMES AND HEALTH. Ron- Flower Scents May Be Obtained In Three Wayi, Pure violet essence Is said to be es pecially suitable to nervous people, but it must be obtained from the flowers themselves, not from the chemical imi tations. Chemically derived perfumes are irritant, poisonous even, to persons of especially sensitive constitution. True flower scents are obtained in three ways—first, by spreading fresh blossoms upon glass thickly smeared with pure grease, letting them stand in the sun and as they wilt replacing them until the grease is as fragrant as the flowers second, by repeatedly in fusing fresh petals in oil, and, third, by infusing them in ether, which is then distilled to a dry solid. As this solid sells for about $250 an ounce it is easy to understand why the ether process, though far and away the best, is not commonly used. But the scented grease and the essences made by steeping it in pure spirit are never cheap. After all the scent possible has been extracted from the grease it is still fragrant enough to make the very finest perfumed soap. All the citrine scents, bergamot, ne rol, orange flower water, are refreshing and in a degree stimulating if properly prepared. To make a lasting perfume some unlmal base is essential—musk, civet or ambergris. Supplied the Want. A certain writer while in San Fran cisco visited the new house of an old friend, a gentleman of Irish extrac* tion. The hostess evidently took great pride in the house, the furnishings of which were new and beautiful and gave every evidence of taste and re finement. The writer, who has an eye for the beautiful, gave unstinted praise to everything he saw. "But," he said, "I am sorry to see that your house, beautiful as it is, lacks one ornament which no Irish bouse should be without-" "What is that?" she asked unsuspi ciously. "A pig," replied the writer, with a satisfied chuckle. The hostess' eyes sparkled. "It did," she said indignantly, "but j'ou have supplied the want."—New York Times. How New York Sleeps. New York is a city of infinite variety. There are those who have beds with out sleep and those who sleep without beds. Three thousand of her winter residents slumber in the cradles of the canal barges that come each year from the canals of New York state, from the great lakes aad Lake Champlain to Bpend the winter months moored in New York harbor. In the tenement districts a man, his wife and his four or six or eight or more children sleep in a single room, and one who goes about the city finds many a device for slumber and repose. On Washington street, on the west side, where the Turks, the Greeks, the Assyrians and the Egyptians live near neighbors to a colony of Irish, Is a queer little orien tal hotel on the top floor of a tenement. —Leslie's Weekly. Confederate Camp Flags, The Confederate stars and bars were In 1803 supplemented by the camp flag. This was In size and shape like the other, except that it was white, with «o stripes, and the battleflag In the wpper corner next the staff. It was found deficient in actual service in that, displaying so much white, it was sometimes apt to be mistaken for a flag of truce, and on Feb. 24, 1805, it gave place to the last flag of the Con federacy, the outer half being a red vertical bar. Appearing so late in the war, it was not so familiar as the oth ers—In fact. It was comparatively little known. Garden Seeds Hats Corsets. Laundried Shirts Hosiery Sofa Pillows Umbrellas Rubber Goods, Storm Coats Ties Storm Rubbers Wrappers 90c up. Men's Pants 75c to $1.50 GolJen Coffee Oyster Shells -J*' i- It.- Ir.** ft UrM mm HANS MADSEN You are now fairly launched in your spring work, so we won't tire you with a long talk, but we'll get down to business and tell you about a few of the many things we've got that you need and can get at astonish ingly low figures. j-'i ~",r •ttiSj-t.fr Hurry and get in your Garden Seed. This is the place to buy seeds that grow. Sioux City and A A D. M. Eerry & Co. Seeds, uG per paper We have just received our spring and summer line of Hats We were fortun ate enough to secure a nice, up-to-date line at greatly reduced prices and will give you the benefit. Fedoras, Stiff Hats and Ranchman—all the latest styles. Ladies, we have all kinds of Corsets for summer wear. Light, cool and easy. Best makes. Cut right, sewed right, bought right, and will be sold right. Come in and get you a dress sliirt that will fit you and will neither rip nor tear. The best line of Hosiery we ever carried Ladies', Children's and Men's. All pric es and all of the best brands. & Some fancy patterns in Sofa Pillows, unique and attractive. An ornament to any parlor and cheap for the quality. »?i jf You'll have plenty of use for an umbrel la before spring is over. We have them in all cloths—silk, or cotton, with plain or fancy handles. """4$ Some more wet weather goods and nec essary to insure good health and com fort. Come in and treat yourself right. Men, you ought to see our Ties. Every style of tie for this season's wear shown here.. You can't dress up without a nice tie. Don't try it, when we sell theip at such reasonable prices. Keep your feet dry. That's what the doctor will tell you and our Storm Slip pers will do it. He may not tell you to get them at Madsen's, but we'll just mention in passing that we have the bsst kind made. Men's, Misses' and Children's. All sizes. Our 90c Wrappers are good but we have some better ones. Ladies come in and see them. If you intend buying, we are satisfied you will carry one away. 1 We have some good pants for men at 75c to $1.50. As good as some stores sell for $2.00 to $4.00. Come" and see them: This coffee comes in drums containing 50 pounds each. We sell drum and cof fee and give a rebate with every 50 pound purchase. You know that this coffee has the flavor and quality and is the best package coffee sold. We can supply you with Ground Oyster Shells for your chickens. It will in crease your egg supply 25 per cent- HANS MADSEN KIMBALLTON, IOWA 1-% -f. SlS&p. .iT-frfV