i?r\» ft I'HtC v. ", ""t* '"i y fP- -if rSv 4. 'J» N he & *A 6w3r^ I K' /..:§' i fais i* fet"1 Mr' c^' & *T- 5-' »s.' r^/-sCJ 5* Lr l-'\ iVf*— Vs? Neilee v )V I *. **V,~ r.*1- n if •3r "ST" i 1 I fi'P- it 5 il S R, I I'* jv'4"' u 9 Y v* hi k" I e-Z* ym 1 ^r' p' '4l. jr i' 1 I* j, i y-'^,* til-l e 1 V" 'f "S|^( r-- .^.Vfe, Fair Telephone Earnings Encourage Investments H, That the said default consisted in the failure to make payments therin specified when due. Whereas no action or pro­ v" v-* Wbtn yon have money to lend yon naturally seek that investment which promises the highest return vdXk Uifc &4uae dttfi te of gaiety. So do other people, Because all investors do this, it is necessary that t&B earnings of the telephone companies be such aa will promote confidence rather than discourage the investment of money in their securities. Extensions and improvements necessary to meet 11m constantly expanding needs of the public for telephone service, can only be made through the Investment of new money in the business. gjBHASift THErHDnE COwrAKT etf Mortgage Foreclosure Sale. WHEREAB, default has been made in the conditions of a cer tain mortgage, dated the 14th day of June, 1917, executed by Jamos Will iam Wymore, and Grace Lil lian Wymore, his wife, of Frank lin County, Kansas, mortgagors to W, D. Huehholz of Newell, Butte County, South Dakota, mortgagee, and duly recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds of Haakon County, South Dakota on the 28th day of June A. D. 1917, at U o'clock A. M. in Book E~1 of Mortgages on page 499 thereof, on the Northwest quarter of Section thirty-five in Township one North of Range twenty-three East of the B. r,i Vi-s^y^xv ceeding has been instituted at law nr otherwise, to recover* the debt secured by said mortgage, or any part thereof, and the amount due and claimed to be due upon said mortgage including installments on note, interest on prior mort gage and taxes paid by mortgagee the date of this notice is One Hundred Toys for all Ages of Childhood Iron Toys, Mechanical Toys, Erector Sets, Konstructo Building Blocks, Games, Books. Dolls. Doll Cabs and Go-Carts. Felt Animals and Teddy Bears at Prices to suit your Pocket Book. PYUEX WAKE OF ALL KINDS Casseroles, Pie Plates, Bean Pots &read Pans and many others From $1.00 upward THE i M-'} Fifteen and 05-100 BOX STATIONERY dol­ lars: NOW THEREFORE, notice is hereby given that by virtue of the power of sale contained in said mortgage and duly recorded as a foresaid, and pursuant to the stat ute in such case made and provid ed, the said mortgage will be fore closed and the premises described md conveyed in said mortgage, to vit: Northwest quarter of Section 55, Township 1 North of Range 23 .ast of the B. H. M. in Haakon bounty, South Dakota, together w'f vith all improvements thereto be onging, will be sold at public auc tion to the highest bidder for cash -,o pay said debt, interest and cos-s allowed by law, including $25.00 statutory attorneys fees, by tbo sheriff of Haakon County., or bis deputy, at the-front door of the court house, in the City of Philip, Haakon County, S. D., on Wednes day the 2fUh day of January, 1921, %t tho hour of 10 00 A. M. of sajd day, subject to redemption as pro vided by law. Dated ft Brllc Fourche, S,"tals.. thLs 1st di v xen'^r-r, 1Wf. W. D. Buc.hholz, Mortgagee. J. W. Maivin, Attorney for Mortgagee. Frank Slotfum, Sheriff of Haakon County. dec 9 jan 25 E'.'S FALLEN LGV: Berlin's Famous Brandenburger Tbor a Byword Once Known Throughout the World ft* the Shrine of German Militarism, It Now a Joke. One of fhe mosi striking .physical slicns of the (ieuiiliuiriziition of t*er inany Is In the degrmlaiion of the fa mous llranrlrnhurger Thor, Germany's i arelj of triumnh.at Lbt? heal of UpTtr.. den Linden, writes Guy lllekok io tht Brooklyn Eagle. IMv-wur visitors to Herlin will re-: member this arch as the very shrine of German militarism ami Ka'serliclve authority. No one hut his imperial majesty w«» allowed to drive through the center arch. A pltitoon of the snn.rieM sol diers in ihe German army wa* quar to red there, ever ready to soap inlo the mo*t ^epileptic rinutii.v a' the ap-: proaeh of any h'jrh ranking oftieer. Drums rolled the arch many tinu»« a d«y—whenever sucii an ollieer loomed in sight—sind hurst into a per fect fever of thump ng and stuttering rt'hen the ail highest drov^ hy. Or dlnnry folk hud to leave the »idewolfc to |ms.s the guiird at the gnte, Now every shabby enh driver, push r-art man, hoy bicyclist or news ^en«ler. makes it a point to g° through lh$ center Hr*h and none other. There Is no pin toon of soldiers of any sort on gun rd. A thousand jremjn:K if there were that many—might amble through w'.ifl out creating a stir. There are no drums to thump. One poor youth »f 'he xe-urfy po lice, not over wfvu informed, stands. n 2^. Holiday Shoppers are Invited to Our Store Appropriate Gifts for All II on ft block of sfone, wftb not an atom of pwnp In him. No one In Berlin ^s so humfile as to do hfm honor. No one thinks of leav ing lie sidewalk for him. In fact he li?i« to have a feme In front of him self keep from being pushed aside by civilians. If he tried to exercise tho authority of a New Yrtrk policeman he would he mobbed, lie assumes no control over street traffic or anything else He merely stands. OfcnsJonally, but very seldom, a i?n stops to aa?t hiia the way to where, and he digs out his little street iirectory and gives his answer meekly, embarrassed at having attract ed Attention. The once proud arch Itself Is plas tered with tattered white placards as Mr* and as plentiful lis our American wartime Liberty loan posters. But the words jind the purpose of the p.!ncards are quite different. They are there, not to increase military strength, hot to reduce It. They are part of the Germ an government's at tempt to obey the disarmament con ilitinnj* of the Versailles treaty and the It'sr letters on them read: "IfeiiVor Hp Ynnr Weapons." The sttral^r letters explain that tfee tmverimieiit must turn over to the en tlie rifles thai the soldiers took 4 honie ivHh them when the army fell re pieces nfteT the armistice, and of» ter a premium for -parly surrender. The Brandenburger Thor. used as an instrument for the weakening of German militarism., ts as complete a reversal of purposes ns if onr own UlotnlA «vf ijhttnfip ««««.•«#» HHoH InoMa with prison cells for editors who In sist on a. free press. Immense Deposits of Prices range from 50c and upward. Will have coninlctc line of ('ihk'v bulk (.'iuM'o'isto.j fin'd i. Bciuid, A Dtiuid. aiul 2 boxes. douim! SALE Coat. Coal fields with a thickness of vein of six feet and with an estimated area of 16.POft.OOO square feet have recently been discovered at a depth of *J(? feet below what- hitherto has been regarded as the bottom of the "Svea. mine*' In Spitsbergen, accord ing to advices from Consul General Murphy at Stockholm*. None but expert miners have been employed flt the Kvea mine beeause of the difficulty in working the old 80 eent(meter vein, but in the new vein unskilled labor may he used. Ma chinery will be used to break out the coal* thereby increasing and cheapen ing the output. Iiiring the present year 36.000 tons are expeeted to bp produced, as against 18,000 in ift19, while In 19*21 it is .estimated that the output will rearb ••72.000 tons. Airplanes Common Now. Four or five years ago an airplane flying overhead was considerable of a siL'ht and would cause everyone to oiiKi qnft tvptfh the niiH'hine. The war. QrnmP' A We have the finest and largest assort** meat of White Ivory that has ever been displayed in Philip. Ycu will have no trouble finding New pieces in the Hne. i)- 5 |t-V' hoth with thousands of planes In use, tin* taken the novelty out of the airplane. Down at Mineola, on Long Island, the only th5ng that will cause a native to gaze into the sky nowadays Is when he fails to hear the roar of an airplane engine. Airplanes are as common as mosquitoes down there, and a dozen of them up over the town at once are no strange sight. When there Is none up, however. It causes 'he Mineolans to gaze aloft to see what the trouble is. JMfvlsed to Raise Own Fit*. Farming of fur nejiring animrtTs nnd establishment of large sanctuary tracts as a Kieaus of preserving the nation's fur supply was advocated by the De partment of Agriculture In a state ment. The department says that un less fur-hearing animals are rigidly conserved, the time Is not far distant when many of the more valuable spe cies will be exterminated and furs will he wovn only by the very wealthy. Mnskrats, skunks, foxes and minks are among the animals which, accord ing to the department, can be suc cessfully bred In captivtty. DRAWN WITH MASTER HAND Will sell while they last 60c and 75c Stationery, latest styles,-at Walter Scott's Portraits of the Past a Notable Contribution to Eng­ lish Literstult,, No wonder that Walter Scott, who, having shown the world In the Min strelsy and the Lay that he was ed itor and poet, and being himself a novel reader, shou'd be ,jtter'v 'tiixnt. tetied with the quality of the existing supply. The French Revolution, dis tinguished by Its leveling principle and action, had ended In substituting a feudal empire for an effete monarchy and even when Napoleon was redlvld ing Europe into kingdoms and princi palities for his family and his follow ers. there had sprung up—or rather revived—a deep devotion to the chiv alry which had done so much In the past, and whose traditions had in grafted grace Into history and breathed reality Into song. To this feeling, this principle, Scott had ministered in his poems and now, acknowledged head of the romantic school, he resolved to extend Its lim its, beyond the ballad to the narrative poem and use prose as the more suit able medium. He strove to delineate the past as It seemed in the eyes of men who were dubious of the present and afraid of the future—noble, state ly, glittering jund gay, with the pulse of life ever beating to heroic measures, His view of feudalism in "The Talis man," "Ivanhoe" and "The Fair Maid of Perth" was not the caricature SSN PHARMACY 'i..*ar* & 'A?*? a few preceding authors had drawn, but a portrait—faithful, if idealized.—" Robert Shelton Mackenzie. Without question the best lift# $£ Cut Glass •ver displayed in the town The most acceptable Gift you can buy for the home. FOR THE MEN Ci^irS tti Christmas packa^s, alf ^fzes, Shaving Mirrors, Military Sets, Traveling Sets, Pipes Notice for Publication Department of the Interior, U.S. Land Office at Pierre, South Da kota, December 3, 1920. Notice is hereby given that Le1a Bell Rundall, formerly Cruick shank, of Hartley, S. D., who, on April 23, 1917, made Additional Homestead Entry, (Sec 7, Act 2 19, '09) No. 013947, for EH NEU section 28, Township 6 North Range 18 East B. H. Meridian, has 'iled notice of intention to make three year proof, to establish claim to the land above described, be fore O. K. Whitney, County Judge Haakon County, S. D., at Philip, S. D., on the 11th day of January, 192fl. Claimant names as witnesses: E. H. Vaughn, of Hartley, S. D. Roy Herrman, of Hartley, S. 1). F. Johnson of Bridger, John O'Rielly of Hartley, S. D. John T. Coiran. R"m\st-r. 1M 1-11 1 Glasses for Near Work As a rule far-sighted peo­ ple need glasses for near work .oniy, imwa aa reatuatf sewing, etc. But occasionally, when the eyes are strained or when headaches persist, it is necessary for far-sighted people to wear Ummut glasses constantly. However the main thought is that relief comes thru wearing glasses—wearing them for near work only, or steadily, whichever ex perience proves is the best You cannot get any more exact form of testing than we have to give yon. Henry M. Reed Jeweler. Registered Watchmaker Opto-netrist 343 Capitol Av., Pierre, South Dakota ts tjfu fi -J,,