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*8 I Ut..- fx -i :.l tv a IS SmSSraE *y-DOUCLAS IMMUIilt if jpriee.. STARCH is conrtantly ftpwing fa favor because it Does Not Stick ta the Iron and it will not injure tbe finest fabric. For laandry purpose sit has ao equal.' 16 as. pecksplfe. MaowtiwHK DEFIANCf STARCH CO. •Usktl/OMd ul raballt typewrll •hm low prioee, Seatgaappwral •at M»o«lt callAmVlf for etockSiLn'r: BwmI aoaOoaipanr, MUnit Street, A^htsi DM fioGiee. Iowa. IJ&Joux City Directory 4' '"Hub of the .Northwest* worn RICE BROTHERS JUvs Week Coeomleeion Kerehanta tOHj, situdKTivi^c^M AVOID Pill Cone to Sloos City nir Own work. Joo*_ea» yew ear fare uT|M away from pain. tM with ei r*anr experience, and (pedal attention to We 0n you a written cuaran tea with every piece of work backed by te out-of-town patient*. SI Gold crown* !«.•« Brldee Work. per tooth full eet ft artificial teeth, -ff-OO Silver fllllnca, SO centiTetc. It your falae teeth are cracked er broken put them la a boa, nail them to me and •fad tl.Ofl and we will mend: them and send them back fry return mall. Bead IS cteti ar. e. *.!*», m-im-m •niwiiue int.,a»«it* ,n. Popular Fallacies. ,1mA x« That nfosquitoes onlj bite once, mosquitoes only lite one M-l. 2. That day.' 3. That mosquito bites won't itch It 'you don't scratch 'em. 4. That if you hold your breath you can catch a mosquito and'slay It. My experience is .that mosquitoes only' bite once (in the same place) that they only live one day (at a time) that their bites won't itch if you don't scratch 'em (but rub 'em with sandpaper dnd the edge of a buzz saw instead) and that if you. hold your breath you can catch a mos quito and slay ,it (provided you hava a shotgun in each hand and are a good "hop- lA. PIMPLES ON HEAD ITCHED Tell City, Ind.—"My baby's head via covered with sorfts and the top., 'was a solid scab. It began with pirn pies and he would scratch his head «iiu it would bleed and then scab over and keep spreading. He wonld claw his head Mid fret, it itcbedand burnedso and I was afraid be would never have any hair ontopof his head ifmM friend recommended Cutlcura S? Boap and Ointment to me. I asked tntr family doctor and he said, 'Tel, Tight ahead and use tliem.' We got' oaed&e of Cutlcura Soap and one box of Cutlcura Ointment and they toaled hiib from the first. In: a few days his head did not seem to itch ^r.iibther bin In tbe least snd before we'had used one set he was- healed s-.!i nhdho has Jtae' gfbwttr of heir.** (flgaed) Mrs. Rosa U. Shinto, Jan. w, mc. Cutlcura 8oap' and Olutmentsold throughout the world,' B*'.npie ofe§ck free.wttKS2*.Slrin Book. Addreeapost Iart NCatieBt%p^L,M jf:-' SMiiKiiiiii^juv^ 'Bitton Johnion^W^ don'tyo* ebme vebnrch, Sani? ), BldnnrrNotbln' suitable, to pamon. ^The Lord wont notlte yo? fbutDeadon ButU mlght hfs shirt« and Bre'r Shapaoo Puck.- :.• :*MMm ., vt' ta A mm* ?wWla you be»r I Say. "Ifs ^a-shame io £^ke the but4e always takea tt. Jlut APalofHH you. was need atthe botet is Tm HMrtT' iww S& «./Slr IkJ^da •X. ONLY TIM PCX CENT PROFIT •AY# STATE LEGAL DE- PARTMENT. JTHER ITEMS OF INTEREST *reni the Capital City, the IState Institutions and Many Different Parte tha ttunkhliie State. •f" .. .• imeasar Cnlon Km Stwlea Pierre.—That "10 per cent profit" taeans only 10 per cent la the holding of the state legal department on In quiry from the department of instrne* tion, in regard to prices which may be-charged for school books in this state. The law provides for purchase of school books by a county board, which selects distrlti&tors for the same, who are limited in.their charges to a profit not to exceed 10 per cent Apparently in some counties the dis tributors have been adding to the contract price, the cost, of transporta tion, cobt of handling and cost of sale, on which they charged a profit, this resulting in different prices In differ ent counties according to the additions placed upon the price by thp dlstrlbu tors. The holding is that this profit is limited not to exceed 10 per cent on the contract price, and that no addt* tions can be made to the cost price beyond,, that of the contract and 10 per cent profit, all other charges to be covered within the 10 per cent al lowance. As this Is the season for purchasing, of sichool books over the state, this ruling Is likely to mean quite a sum In aggregate In the pur chase price of books. Alfalfa West of River. Pierre.—Henry Jeffries of Sansarc, who is one of the most persistent of the experimental farmers west of the Missouri river, states that he has er tended his cherno and yellow flowered alfalfa acreage about forty acres this year, and is spreading the seed of these varieties each year In not only that immediate vicinity, but has been qending seed out on request to sec* tions of other states where the condi tions are' similar to those in central Stanley county.' ^e has also been ex perimenting with a species of ftoe which runs to grain, ahd iBhds that he can secure a crop alongside cora which will not develop with the same amount of rainfall. The grain from this cafie. is said to be equal to mixture, of corn and ilbdfa for hog teed? and Mr. Jcl^es finds Oat It'Is pra#ieil^ .a Certain dryweather crop? 8PRINGS C/B. Grew it exhibiting at his office samples of two-yearKld^ alfalfa roots, secured at a place where the river had cut ihto the bank on his field just east of town. Tliese roots, which are about an Ihch in diameter at the plant, are over six f^et In length, and as large, as an or 4lni»y lead pencil where they were broken off, the root'growth probably extending several. feet further Into the SOll. New Building for Sanitorlum. Custer.—The contract has been awarded by the state board of chari ties and corrections for a new pavilion at the tuberculosis sanitorlum. Th.e contractor who was awarded the con tract barely kept his figures within tho appropriation. Four thousand^ dol lars was the sum appropriated* for the pavilion and the lowest: bid was $3,957. This new pavilion is a necessity, as nearly aU rooms are taken in the pres ent ^buildings. The new building will be of the Bame general style as the oth er? and will have bed accommodations on the Out-of-door porches- tor fourf te«»h psople. Ma«y Chlekena Few Abeerdeen.—The prairie, chicken crop in this section of the state is lair this year^ but .the crop of hunters is expected to be a bumper. Already 221, hunters' licenses have been taken out in Brown obnnty. Tbe chicken seasm opens September 10. Last year over 1,200 licenses were issued in the county and this number is expected to b^ exceeded this year. •lies Are .',iM*erde^L-rThe silo Is a popular in Mtt^iiMiig nortbern Sonth Dak» t»vr jEWrmt'^ir» tfae imme diate vicinity oY Qi«tOn there are 41 silos, and in other ^mh Ib this part of the state siilop arevfajl^'tts nomeK oui- Many fonners have Miready cdt Qieir corn and-vlcced it in the silo.*' Cfflsvrle After TheTanktoacoiiego au announce that in tiie finan .lillt to date -it has secursd tbe swm & IWS.W0 towards tbe f*9»r 000 neiMtbd seewrli J. J. Hilt's a tdHm^i ii,as tke balanf» irf^ tbe ysa|r ln which to *n wjr IsISIS^khPS •tats College Agronomist Tells How Brdoitings.—A thousand Sooth Dakota farmers are this .-year growing the new forage crop KaoH ang. Many inquires are comflag from them concerning methods of select ing and saving tbe seed! In sending suggestions to Inquiries. Mauley Champlin, Assistant agronomist at state college, writes: "To get the best results with the. Kaoliang, save the heavy, compact beads growing for next year's seed This wilt Insure seed that will gro« and will overcome tbe tendency to rUn out When first introduced a few years ago the Kaoliang was extremely variable, having tall stalks, short stalks, compact heads and loose heads. The seed stock, distributed by the: South Dakota experiment-station w*s from selected seed plots, but selection by the grower to prevent It from Mn ning back to Its old variable nature wfll be lust as necessary as it is to select good seed cora. "J. D. Morrison, scientific .asslstaaf at the Hlghmore snbstation, who bas: worked with this crop since 1812, says: "I fully expect to see thie'day. when we will have boys' K&ottanig clubs In the western part of the state similar to the present boys* Corn clubs. with a view-to interesting the boys In the Improvement of this valuable crop.*", Notable Decrease In Hogs. Prompt Dlstributlon of VU^:c^ Pierre^—Prompt emergency, service in secwring hog cholera virus from the state laboratory at Brookings baa b$en provided for by a modification of tlie regulations for, Issuance of vlnis by tbe state live stock sanitary commis sion. The old regulations required a formal written order on a spficWi tOrm to be sent in before ai^-vjbras}would be issued, and tbls took time. Tbe modification of the regulatbms allows Or. Llpp at the head of ^at depart ment at Brookings, to UMte shlpmente on, telephone Or :tel«^nph orderr witb the provision that tto Jormial written order must at m^:.fo^j|!^p:ririre order. The change ts expisclted to be used Only in emergency Cases, and its purpose is to help otit in sttch ^ases only,, and not t6 be used as Mgtiiar method of ordering.., Evefty VermUUon.-~Pmer" K.., baa been Chosen as dean of the jcollege of geology abd ntlnerology gt tbe st4t6 university' to fsCceedvE^ iC ^?er|sho, recently etocted president of the State Agricultral college at Bro^UngH. l(r. Eyerly to a graduate of VtiMtklin a^d Marshall c^qiege And Yale^ptlversity. He spent several-years W^radn&te study in jQertnan universities and the University ot Chlcsigq. E^ hai held professorships *a Bedfie^l college, Yankton college ai^ Sontl( P^ota State college, ami forsg-year,*4b act* 4t s.i^kot|p Qtrter.-MShariied with to an lndlan, Fref & Io^b«looa.\7'«^^f»(Mtmi^'%lBiro before »t|t*s 1fl|||)lsStcaier, b&a for next firm of «i!h^'n#fiH-.na4Nr a C*mp this Hqpftaa» «T 'T"" "mam p.gr *#$• S WBBKLV ^tJ^i HdT SPRINGS. 8QUTH D*K,C»TA. ibAviNQ KA0LIAN«1«1*0^7 SKEWS OF SOUTH"lAKiQ^fA x^Nelero a.: Pierre,—Some of the effects of -tho hog cholera which swept part of the state last fall and this spring, are. Bhown in the number of hogs retuiMl for assessment The figures for list year, were 634,616, whUe the number returned for the 1914 asseBsment iSj 497,074. While there was "a material reduction In the number'.of hogs re turned, cattle make a showing in thf other direction with a' material In crease, the returns for 1914 showing. 1,089,467, while In the 1913 returns there were but 956,096. The number of horses and mules increased from 627,422 in 1913 to 634,666 in 1914, while the sheep of the state increased from 391,049 to 419,331 in the year period, the .showing being for in-, creases In ail classes of live stock ex cept hogs, where the, caus^of the re duction was without doubt, the epi demic of the year. Heir Cuts Off the Stats. ,v* Deadwood.—The appearance of an heir has. cheated the state of South Dakota out of he balance of the estate of the late Mary E. Wilson, ^idoir of John T. Wilson, once connty treasurer and well known here. Wilson died here several years agOi leaving. his estate to his ivlfe. Shortly afterward she died without children or relatives of any sort an| under tbelnw it wai necessary to turn over her estate to of any sdrt and under, the law-it Was learned that in 1863 she bad been adopted legally by John Ifr Ellis of Livingston county, He. 8oth miis and* his wife are long deadj' but Mrs. Klllb had a sister, Mrs. John H. Wells, who learned of the estate and put in her claim which has just «e£n allowed by the court and she will get $2,600 in cash, the remainder of the' eri&te! "aSSBf: ••'•,VHBfei^L NewgpapeHTelbe ^Timber Lake had oopleted a three lays' "birthday" celebration wblclt was A complete success In every way. The twenty-seventh annual conven tt»n of the Minnehaha county Sunday School association ctmrened In Garret •on August 29, and Is pronounced as *W»e of the best enventins ever held. Glen Gould, a threshing machine op erator at Aberdeen, has threshed over .46,000 bushels Of wheat so far this Season, and reports that the smallest JTleld per acre was 14 bush3ltf, while Jkome of the grain ran 22 bushels to tbe acre. A fall sustained while going to rell* lotus services caused the death of Mrs. WUliam Siginund, wife of a well 'Itnown resident of Jerauld county. The unfortunate woman was .6 years of. «ge, and is survived by her husband flpd six children. On the Waletlch ft Plat .farm, four mttes wost of Slssetln, there are about IjOO acres of buckwheat, which is a (lew crop for that part of South Da Itota. it is thought the field will yield .between 30 and' 40 bushels per acre, •As the experiment with raising this .grain has been so successful, it is be* lleved the buckwheat acreage of that territory wiU show a vefy'large ln crease next year. A. N. Waters of DeSmet was host recently to a party Of twelve pioneers in honor of James Hall now of Stew artsville, Minn., and George A. Math ews of Brookings, both, with Mr. Wa ters, pioneers of Kingsbury countT. where Mr. Mathews established the. test paper in the county, the DeSmet News, and Mr. Hall was an early day lawyer, a member of the pioneer firm of Hall ft Watson. :.|as The Watertown board ^f education made a levy for school purposes frhich wil bring. In' a total of $62,183, %blch it is estimated will carry tbe lliibHc schools through the school year which opened this month. This is ian Increase over last year of Rijr W. Oldts, who shot and killed his yotmg wife in Billings, Mont., and th himself, because she had sued blm for divorce,' and his wife were, jbioth from Deadiwood. His wife was Qertie Marnette, born and raised there,jsnd the couple were married tlierel* few years ago and had been in Billings oniy a little over a year. Mrs.Oldt's father and brothers and sisters llve at Deadwood and the body was brought there for burial^ A Serious hemorrhage foltowing an opeiMlon for the removal of adenoids resulted in the death of Ethel Jones,' a pogtllar Parker girl, 14 years of age. In cOuformity with a new school sys tem, recommendation bad been made thats number of pupils be subjected to operations for the ^removal of ton sils Ifap adenoidB. A Sioux Falls sur geon ^pU Called in to conduct the op erotMnp. Mov Berious results followed the '0|ier^tionB except in this one case. His jCjm s^d body weare badly cut and bru'lip'-^ i^ioux Falls is going for- Under r: mim abMltt .000. The Increase Is caused by the addition of six new teachers, who will be a part of tbe faculty of the graded and high schools. Mrs. Moulton, residing near Mcin tosh, was the vlcitm of a strenuous ex perience when she started to drive some cattle from the corn field. The battle, instead of leaving peaceably, ed on Mrs. Moulton, and she Was,, ed t6 take refuge In a small tree that chanced to be In the corn field. Tbe cattle surrounded the tree and She •was unable to escape untll a neighbor, f'man, observra her predicament uid #Bht to the rescue, Mike D^nn, a pioneer rancher of the Cheyenne river-country returned, from &: bprrfe selling trip to eastern South tialcatn and Minnesota, quite disguteted. the horse market. He found unsatisfactory wherever bo wfBt,' and returned with ill his horses to'await a favorable turn to the horse market which he declares is at. pres ent jtoo low to justify him in dispos ing of bis holdings. full steam, if postal re- ceipupit,the gity, said to be one of the niosi^aotlieritic business barometers wat^pd by the captains of industry, are i|K'-iii[dication of tbo huge propor tioa^i fiacrease over the sa^ie month lastmM' Witbout a flood of campaign literMprp' .o inflate the figures, the re celMPp^t'Auc^iit. at the local post* offi^|talled $12,395.28, a gain of 47.Sajntoinit''bvaai!-those of the same peril^P^i^i9l3. The increase Is $3, 996.0|^uove last year's total. Udred Forbes and Miss .Kathi erini^Wner, of Bonesteel. who sOme. started for Berlin, Ger» maa^^ir the purpose of studying mu sic, Jmpildr' whose safety there had beetl^m&e. fears, according to Infor raat^Kf^hiCh' has just reaped', here,, are ^Milimd well in tendon. They' »re jHkCted to Return to the Uplted 'StatMwyjfeitoith' Dakota this month. The M» to whlch they went to Europe wasyflfrSniMi liner. and witllei mak in« MKlpgiiy: was sighted and French, warship, which, howjHh^W*s unable to overtake it teste Oli* «ky clut late in IS baseball lkvr will be result Of tbe arrest. of Jas. ,11 and Charles membersiif of Uk' charge of bi,vili« vlo |Mday bipeb^U':l«^:' 'Wt Sre io and destroyed tern ^ihe farm from. OfiiictWK In .ihe/ barn, Jordahl l0st calves, 2JJOO bushels of of hay* ill Ills bam|ia.' vrotart^ Tb« iocs. WO EXCUSE FOR EARLY Man Who Oete Up aft Dmni Ra. I» Assertion Mads bp 'Owight Tbe arrogance of arises to the minor bath bis beep complained heroic* folk who arise to warm one. To be set ability to stand the shock tor has seemed to less an unsubstantial claim fee It lacks moral sultlcieaey much made of by tbe esMl Another' arrogance 'to eraUon by the Bey. 8. J.. In America, it is (he of early risers. Father them Uetolsm and as to their inteUigence. Aa'« finds them a "notably appearing to believe that on a "higher ethical Every normal given ordinarily being on occasion tempted into it, has fcdt the afflatus the moral pattlac eai in consequence thei that a good deed has a naughty world Is sttjpreme. Father Dwlght early riser Is the least mankind OOODYCAR TIRES AT ANTE-BELLUM The Goodyear tin ft announce "No war prioes mmi Tires." Mr. F. A. of t&e Company, thus unique position. "We advanced GOodyear others did theirs, when tt panic came. Almost tn a rubber rose In New Torkl per pound to muoh over a "The New York as smalltoconsldMr. Lon don people to buy l^1 the rabber theren By and paying csA they 000 pounds of the fbMisk "That big supply be nearly all on the way to tfcel •factory In Akron. It best of the London sa, "We are idling the rubber and the same we always have used In "We |6,* are running ooir three shifts Of men,' a day. So long as we fortunate position supply tire users at to the llibtt of our Great Confederats Gen. John C. fended Jlcksbtarg lirben. besieged by tfte federal General Grant .was bora In pbl|,{100 y««Ws ate of West Point and saw the Mexican war. At tho the Civil war he cast Ms the South. After servlcn et ft more in the East he in* the command of tbe the Mississippi by President Dayls, with whom he mm vorlte. For nine months berton defended Vicksburg northern armies. The July 4,1863, when, owing of ammunition and eral Pemberton surrendered Ms army. After the war bo Warrington, Va„ and In to Perth Amboy, N. J^ quently to Philadelphia, in 18*1. The Pollow-Up "Why do you get the jobs first? IS that fairr "Best for afl concerned," the head of the scbool ot "The pretty girl soon ployer, and then there's'» Unquestlonsbly. "Which would you chauffeur or an avlator?^ "Well, the latter Is the tlon."' Not All of 'En. "Thje mills of the gods !y—" "How about the'gatleqr Many a man who starts nt Om I of tbe lader managers by and determination to be fini8b. Don't jive advice that take yourself. mi Birnii to th* tbe hontes are 7 t«fldbi A'tim- tot*-:??: mum* gfndn jtfie yotf .ha^e .5S |2^M. in -wblcti. Issi Sl mmmmmmrnmmmmmmlimm+mmmm*** ?lliasSiSL HnfdlyA Vf^ibls pi,now jfaeBy tm. it t© an. isiwi be ad to bave yoa »y nroUnd talwtt. Ok,N.Y. are 01 do not mmmmm /}& nwny ftt WMBi w&t rubber ^ants W -... •-«. •. Hil*rnltteiit. "Amv-Anyjwkf »seNr Mo, tin flahfeei^i...|*^» pnrt time sebMs^ 'r. Psyehologloal. f» found out one thlng.^ "And wbatls tbatT" -«tei prioes soar spirits nsn^dea 1Krtby TeeBlM^wa»teO*»d|»li mmM eatu 1 eouMh't the ealeerr- tki uiur vere l» tea. Neth helped me and '•i w,