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The Madison daily leader. [volume] (Madison, S.D.) 1890-current, November 29, 1904, Image 2

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

Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn99062034/1904-11-29/ed-1/seq-2/

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sizes and colors.
LOT 1 consists of Ladies Ker
sey and Boucle Jackets 22 to
24 inches long sold for $4.00 to
7.60
Now
$1.69
LOT 2 consists of Ladies' Iter
sey, Beaver and Boucle Jackets
22 to 27 inches long, sold for
13.50 to $10
Now $2.79
Hmi
nam son, (toi rii
i
hi
®ljl' $aU»l JCaClCt'i CAR J0VPS_THt TRACK.
DAki'i
i
TKIiHt OVSUBWIIPTION.
By mail, 1 your $4 00
By malt, n mouths. 8.1)0
Hy in*ll, 3 months l.UU
Bj mall,
1
month
By carrier per »Mk 10
.1. f. sTAIil, Proprietor.
II A SfAtll., HudIbmiw imnt r,
In view of the damage clone by rust
in the northern halt of South Dikota
last season, and the importance of the
farmers being unusually careful in the
selection of seed grain for nest year's
crop, the Chicago and Northwestern
Railroad company will hold a large
nniuber of pure seed meetings (luting
the present winter in every part of
South Dakota traversed by its lines.
It will run special train, under
charge of Mr. Johnson, who will be
accompanied by Hon. M. F. Ureeley
and Prots. Wilson and Wheeler, of the
Sooth Dakota Agricultural college.
The tiain will be fully equipped for
trie work aud the two professors and
Mr. Ureelev will demonstrate to all
farmers who attend the meetings the
best method of testing seed, and the
vast importance of using no seed except
snch as is strong and vigorous.
Miller dispatch, 27: The finding of a
dead man in a wheat field near Wahpe
ton the middle of last September, then
so badly decomposed thst he could not
be identified, led the oflicers here to Vie
lieve that it might be the body ot Jacob
Johnson, who was murdered near here
the last of June. An officer went up
there last week and found th«t the de
scription correpsonded somewhat to
that of Johnson The man found there
had
$11
and
a
watch. He was ot short
stature, had a red mustache and good
teeth, the same a4 Johnson had. It is
not believed that it is the same man,
however. If it is. his murderers car
ried him nearly #»u miles in the wagon.
The record of election returns in Ind
iana shows tnat not leas than 10.()()()
voted were cast in that state at the late
election for Bryan for president. They
were not accredited of course, an 1 eren
had tnev twa east for the regular dem
ocratic nominee the state would still
have been for Roosevelt.
-fiot Springj Star The agitation
11
„.
The late election reduced the nntnber
of women county superintendents in
the etate by two. Day, Miner and
Clay counties the change was from
women to men, and in Clark county,
the change was from a man to a worn
an. These changes will make the ratio
thirty-lhe men to eighteen women su
perintendents after the new officers
take their places in January.
Pierre dispatch, 27: This fall a num
ber of South Dakota horses are being
shipped to southern points, and are
said to meet with favor in the markets.
Among the latest shipments in that
direction were three car loads, which
were driven here from Butte county
last week, and shipped to points in
Tennessee, and the taking of two car
loads, Tuesday to Florence, Alabama,
by S. H. Young, who pidM ap bis
stock in Sally county.
King's Dyspepsia Tablets cure indi
gestion, dyspepsia and strengthens the
Stppiicj)* Sold by Stoddard
A Good Complexioa.
"Sparkling eyes and rosy cheeks ro
stored by using DeWitt's Little Early
Misers," so writes S. P. Moore, of Na
cogdoches, Tex. A certain cure for hil
iousness, constipation, etc. Small pills
-easy to take- onay to act. Sold by
& Ode*
1 /*,*
THE BIG STORE
,.*vGreat Cloak Clearing Sale
In order to CLRAR out our stock of old style Cloaks and Jackets we have made SWEEP
INO PRICE RBDyCXlOiiS- IJwlr not been considered, Oood assortment of
mj.
4k Good Assortment of Children*' 4k Misses Cloaks and Jackets SI.CO to $5.C0.
J. A. JOHNSON.
*. One Man Kilted and Fourteen Pereona
Injured.
TUESDAY, NOVRMBKU 29, 1904. St. I^ouia, Nov. 29.—One man was
i killed outiight anil fourteen other pas
sengcrs were Injured, some of them
seriously, in a Bcllefontaine street car
Urn! jumped the track and overturned.
Charles J. Warner was thrown off the
platform and si ruck headforemost on
a pile of street car rails, meeting al
most Instant death.
The accident occurred at a curve
while the street car was running at
usual speed. Leaving the track the
car dashed across the street, hitting
the curb and overturning, strewing
the street with injured. When the ac
cident occurred the car was crowded
Willi men. women and children on
their way to work.
Police Sergeant Connors arrested
Moiornian Charles H. Smith and Con
din tor P. Morganier. Neither is
in.ineed. Smith told the police that
the accident was a used by the failure
of ins airbrake to work while the car
was on the down grade leading to the
curve.
PERISH
Breaking
WHILE TRAPPING.
Kihiuis,
where they had gone
to nap niusktats.
The boys had started early in the
moiuing. intending to return homo in
time for dinner, and when they did
uoi appear at that time a search was
instituted tor them by the paientu.
'1 he scan hing party went to the lake,
where two holes in the ice were lound,
which indicated in what way the boys
had met death.
At one of the holes one body was
recovered and brought hack tj St.
Francis. The coroner has been noti
lied and au endeavor will be made to
recover the body of the other boy.
JAPANESE VEGETABLES.
Caltl
vhIIou
ot
of
a ww capitol building at Pierre ie a
good tiling, but wouldn't it be best to
wait antil the Milwaukee railroad is
built across the state, so that the struc
ture may be built of Black Hills stone
aud marble and onyx"' Lets use our
own beautiful building material. It is
not only cheaper, but better than can
be gotten elsewhere. Let South Dako
ta imitate wme of the other states and
construct the whole building out of ma
terials from our own state. It isu 't
necessary to buy anything outside of
South Dakota. That is of itself a,Y&l
nable advertising feature.
I do Will Be udcr-
Uken on Farm R««r Seattle.
Two greenhouses are being erected
by a Japanese company of Seattle,
Wash., on the Crystal Springs farm, on
Itainbridge island, for the cultivation
of Japanese plants available in Seattle
market lor commercial uses or dellca
cies. The preparations for the experi
wents in the growth of Japanese prod
ucts are being made under the direc
tlou of n member of a Japanese mi
porting and exporting tlrin a ml under
tlie guidance ami assistance of the ag
rienlturai department of the Tinted
States government, says tiie Seattle
Times,
The first experiment will be made
with the cultivation of udo, a Japanese
phuiL similar in some respects to celery
aud asparagus, though possessing a
flavor different from either. It is ut,ed
extensively in winter salads and Is a
delicious vegetable. Orders have own
placed in Japan for two varieties of
udo, and the agricultural department
will supply other plants. I'do Is be
ing grown in California, and the gov
ernment lias experimented with the
plant.
Steps will be taken to Introduce san
cho, a apice somewhat similar to-red
pepper, though possessing different
qualities. Wasabl, a Japanese product
comparing more nearly to horseradish
than anything else of American cul
ture, will be introduced at the Bain
bridge island farm.
Japanese water lilies will be grown
as soon as steps ean be taken to intro
duce them, and other flowers, includ
ing chrysanthemums, are to be in
troduced later. The growing of flow
ers peculiar to Japan Is a branch of the
Industry that will follow if other ex
pertinents meets with success.
The Japanese firm expects to le able
to cultivate bamboo on Bainbridge is
land It is believed by agricultural
department officials and members of
the Japanese firm that the Washington
climate will encourage the growth of
bamboo. If bamboo can be raised on
llainbrldge island successfully it will
greatly encourage Its use in light fur
niture and other usea to which It la
put in Japan and other oriental coun
tries The growing of bamboo will not
be attempted at once, however.
The property taken by the Japanese
firm is held under lease. It includes
160 acres lying uo thf ayuiU side of
Balnbridge Island
-«. hiw.» &%**«•#«»
"Hr\*
iL
im
A,«
LOT 3 consists of Ladies1 Ker
sey, Beaver and Zibeline coats
sold for $7.60 to $16
Now $3.89
LOT 4 consists of Ladies* Ker
sey and Zibeline coats, 27 to 30
inches long, sold for $0.00 to
$18
Now $5.29
of Two
Ice Causes Death
f/ mr.eeota Boys.
Anoka, Minn., Nov. 2".). Two Bona of
(i. Emmons of St. Francis, rged
foui teen and fifteen years, vrt*
dnivvne I in a small pond a mile cast
of St.
mm
ii i•
'&'* Sih&}*'dr.
1 -i 11 rtLD.
and
Paassnger Train on the Mobile
Ohio Derailed.
Memphis, Nov. 29.—Passenger train
No. 4 on the Mobile and Ohio railway
was derailed a mile east of Columbus,
Miss., and thirty-five passengers were
injured.
Moat of the injured are residents of
Alabama and Mississippi. None will
die.
The plate where the wreck occurred
1b on a pcrlectly straight track on an
embankment thirty feel high on both
aides No definite explanation has yet
been given as to the ause of the acci
dent. The combination baggage and
express tar rolled down the embank
ment and the other two coaches, both
passenger roaches, were torn loose
and fell over tho embankment.
THREE WORKMEN PERISH.
•url«tf by Cavain While Laying Water
Mams.
St. Louis, Nov. 29. -Three ot tv.ehe
laborers employed in the digging of
trenches lor the laying of water mains
in .Southwest St. Louis were buried by
a (a vein and perished. A bin sting
walei pipe aused the cavein. Those
who escaped at once went to work
with the help of others and In twenty
minutes dug out thefr companions,
who were dead. The men were Ital
ians. The trench in which the men
were at work was ten feet deep.
NO «M9t SINCE JULY t.
Serious Result# of Long Drought In
K »ntucky.
Louisville, Nov. 2VJ.—The record
breaking iliou^lit in Kentucky is be
ginning to tiei lease the milk supply in
i»ui*vitle. t.eve al dairies it^ve put
their cuhtonieia on a hait a.iowam-e
and couu-i uoneis a.e umiu.e to sei ure
enough ol u»o ItulJ *oi uin i-ul'i^.g
certain kindb of aD 'y. A nuu.tje. of
distilloiks au.^i-ndeJ o e.auons
until lam talU. in seve-.il small
plan.-) tiie
i
ilistens a e VVUI-M
an I -Uv.a in u.jiiiy
hi
»t u. ts to tt'ive n—. tk'vt.ui feiucs to
water.
tor Rio.c than a ianth the ,°.oaUiurn
lU..iwa ta-i been h^Uiing water to its
Bin i'.vi^ht clones run
Uliij i.v*..ft., 4»w. a:i1 Lex
in^u.a t.u.» i-aw.viuebu.g i-u.i tiurgen
a.e it:-, i ou^.e wan., lan.vs. All
th. a. hi .nii^ts on the nesaytake
a#i. ^u..i .a ...ay huve been tarrying
two la .Aa to: .Vv vfc.al weeks.
The i.iunurthtt touihe n ia.lroad rc
po ts it i:as close a:l its wateJng
atatm. ..et n Le.:n on and So.n
ense:. a o o. eighty miles, and
the icjervolr is now running
low Tat- other roads lepoit the same
conditions. There has been no tain
ait»o«» .lisK
O. C. Newman, Frankfort—Onr baby
was sickly, did not grow. Our doctor
recommended Ilolliater'a Rin-ky Moun
tain Tea Now she i strong, rosy and
healtny. thanks to vonr Tea. Weenta.
Frank SmitD.
Not a Sick Day Sincc.
M{
was taken severely siek
with
kidney
trouble. I tried all sorts of medicines,
none of which relieved me. One day
saw an ad. of your Electric Bitters and
determined to try that. After taking a
few doses I felt relieved, and soon there
after was entirely cured, and have not
seen a sick day since. Neighbors of
mine have been cured of Rheumatism,
Neuralgia, Liver and Kidney troubles
ami (Jeneral Debility." This is what B.
F. Bass, of Fremont, N. C. writes. Only
.jU\ at Stoddard A Halstead Druggists
Mothers Praise It.
llotbera
everywhere praise
One
Min­
ute Cough Cure for the sufferings it lias
relieved and the lives of their little ones
it has ^aved. A certain cure for coughs,
croup and whooping cough. A. L. Spaf
ford, Postmaster, Chester, Mich., says
"Our little girl was unconscious from
strangulation during a sudden and terri
ble attack of croup. One Minute Cough
Cure quickly relieved and cured her and
I cannot praise it too highly." One
Minute Cough Cure relieves coughs,
makes breathing easy, cuts out phlegm,
draws out inflamation, and removes
every cause of a cough and strain on
lungs. Sold by Cook A Odee.
You cannot cure piles by external ap
plication. Any remedy to be effective
must be applied inside, right at the aeat
of the trouble. ManZan is put up in a
collapsible tube, with a nozzle, se that
it reaches inside and applies the remedy
where it is most needed. ManZan
strengthens the blood vessels and nerves
so that piles are impossible. ManZan
relieves the pain almost instantly, heals,
RESCUE OF FAIRBANKS
How Indiana Senator's Life Was
Saved In His Boyhood
EE WAS DBOWBHQ OT A GREEK.
Bvl»ot la I'aloa Coaatjr, O., When
Or. B. C. Hobln»on of Plata Ity
Keicecd the Senator When They
Were Schoolboy* Tog-ether Old
Tim* AactiatM Tat* Ak««t Mb* Id
etaalaa.
Forty years ago when the two were
schoolmates lu Darby township,
I'm
Ion county, O., Dr. £. C. Robinson of
Plain City, O., saved the life of Sen
ator 'buries W. Fairbanks of Indiana
by pulling blui out of Darby creek,
where they were swimming, says
i i e
Columbus (O.) State Journal.
Both boys grew into young manhood
Intimate friends, and the friendship
la still unbroken. Some two iuon(n
ago, w hen the 1 niou county home i:
lug drew, hundreds of former residents
to Marysvllle, Robinson and Fairbanks
met for the tlrst time lu years. Though
necessarily brief, their meeting was
brimful of gladness. Robinson in i!U
cussing the rescue recently said:
"As a loy he was a model -slight,
fair nnd curly haired. For all that, he
was full of life, and in foot racing and
the old style games of ball he beat
a
of us. Then a great game was
u
pen, lour boys within a rectangle and
four on the corner bases. The felloe
on the corners were permitted to 'bum
those on the inside with the ball
long as they didn't miss. Charley coo
id
throw like a shot, and there was
a I
ways a hustle when It came to cbo .s
ing up to get him. His appearance
was deceptive in the extreme, and he
was game to the core.
"The afternoon 1 saved his life e
went swimming, he, I and Henry Mo
ton, a cousin of mine. The pool
w a s
pretty deep in places, and Charley, in
wading, stepped Into what
Ave
an offset. He went In over
called
i s
dej
i
and came up sputtering and blows n.1
like a porpoise. He had gone down a
couple of times before I got where I
could get my Angers Into his long yel
low hair and pull him ashore.
"When he got so he could speak his
first exclamation was, 'Please don't tell
mother.'
"Then he promised me a dozen ap
ples and made the same offer to my
cousin. We finally agreed and didn't
tell of it for months. He wouldn't ad
mit that he couldn't swim, but Insisted
ou going in again and proving that he
could. Moreover, he surprised us both
by swimming the creek.
'Why didn't you
aMim
tbe first
time?' 1 asked him.
"I couldn't get started,' he replied.
The water went down the wrong
way.'
"After that I never knew him to have
trouble in keeping afloat. Before the
summer had ended be swam like a
duck.
"Charley began his strenuous life
very early. When be was three years
old his father began building a new
house One day while his mother was
away at a neighbor's and the men
were busy with the new house Charley
fired the old one. The workmen had
left a lot of shavings against the kitch
en walls, and the youngster threw a
blazing brand from the opeu fireplace
among them. The house burned down,
but most of the furniture was saved.
This was the log cabin in which he
was born.
"We both lived in Darby township,
about three miles apart, aud the school
house was midway between. Both of
us walked the mile and a half to school
twice a day. Frequently on Saturdays
we would visit each other. Squirrels
were plentiful In those days, and I
used to trap lots of them. Charley
didn't know how, or at least didn't
make u success of the sport. One day
he begged me to trap him a squirrel.
We landed one along in the afternoon
Just before he was ready to start
home. I was carrying it so that it
couldn't bite, but he Insisted upon my
letting biin have it.
'Better let me carry it until \ye get
home, so I can put it in a box for you,'
I told him, but he wouldn't have It so
He wanted to carry it whether or not.
Finally 1 let liiui have it. He hadn't
gone fifty feet before he dropped the
squirrel, with a squeal of pain. It hud
bitten him through the thumb. We
finally caught another one, and this he
consented to take home in a box.
"After his graduation from the Ohio
Wesleyan university Charley remained
in Union county only a short time, lu
that brief stay, however, he took his
flrst interest in politics. It wasn't a
howling success. I remember very dis
tinctly along about the middle of the
seventies that there wras a fight on in
the county convention for the nomina
tion for sheriff. Darby township had
candidate whom Fairbanks warmly
supported. When the convention time
rolled around the man who was to
have placed our candidate In nomina
tion was ill, and we were left in the
lurch. It finally devolved upon young
Fairbanks to make the speech.
"He was a tall, not ungraceful, but
very red faced and bashful youth, and
his confusion was painful when he
arose, ta make, his speech 1 u the mhU
SAMPLE SHOES
IMIIMMMMIIHH
P. J.
speaker in our section of the county
and had already begun to give
Aa Od«
*3M&^maEBKm?rza3^msmrzaem
Children's Clothing at proportionate prices.
laAV
$1.75 a heavy all wool garment now 65 cents.
dTe of it he floundered hopelessly and
finally named his man In a desperate
effort and sat down. His candidate
lost, but the incident spurred Fair
banks to greater effort. He set about
organizing a literary debating society
and in this cultivated self possession
and oratorical ability. Before he let
to study
he was easily the best
promise
of the ability that has marked his lat
tr career."
0t
tiirkey Tta»e.
Now the turkey steps forth grandly tn
the center of the stage
Now the publisher gives orders for a
turkey sketch—front page
Now the artist turns to turkey in a dU'
and listless way
Now the bard In desperation wondeis
what is new to say.
Tho markets groan with turkeys, youi ih
and tender, old and tough
There is turkey all about US, but w« can
not get enough.
There are turkeys adolescent there are
turkeys In their teens,
There are turkeys In the papers turkey*
In the maguzines
There are turkeys In the stories there
are turkeys in the news
There are turkeys In the columns Of the
dignified reviews
There are turkeys lu the love tales then
are turkeys In the books
There are turkeys simply fashioned then
are turkeys quite de luxe.
There are turkeys In the poems there
turkeys in the plays
There are turkeys in the evens there arc
turkeys 011 the drays
There are turkeys in the grab bag at tilic
sewlng circle's fair
There are turkeys in the kitchen then
are turkeys on the stair
There are turkeys in the sketches then
are turkeys in the yard.
For the frost is on the pumpkin, and th*
turkey's on the bard.
There's an endless flow of turkeys from
the village, -vale and farm.
And the turkey ridden husband takes
turkey on his arm
There are turkeys In the street cars
there are turkeys tn the vans
There are turkeys in the barrels boxes.
bags, crates, bales and cutis.
But over and Leyond It tdl an hour "f
bliss see,
When the turkey's on the tab!*—then It's
good enough for me.
—J. W. Foley in New York Times.
Dr. Dade's Little Liver Pills cure Liver
Pills.—Stoddard & Halstead.
There is more Catarrh in thin sectiun
of the country than all other diseases
put together, and until the last few
years was supposed to bo incurable
For a great many years doctors pro
nuunced it a local disease and prescribed
local remedies, and by constantly failing
to cure with local treatmeut, pronounced
it incurable. Science has proven
catarrh to be a constitutior al disease
aud therefore requires constitutional
treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manu
factured by F. J. Cheney A-Co.,Toledo.
Ohio, is tho only constitutional cure on
the market. It is taken internally in
doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful
It acts directly on the blood and mucus
surfaces of the system. They offer one
hundred dollars for any case it fails to
cure. Send for circulars ami testimon
ials Address: F. J. CHKNKV, JfcCO.,
Tol edo, Ohio. Sold by all Druggists
7.~ Tak) Hill's Family Pills for Con
stipation.- Stoddard A Halstead.
*»V'- ***1 .fv
i
Hoidal & Co.
GOING OUT OF BUSINESS
Ms g*v
r-'ii
Fur Coats at Less Than Actual Cost
THE
For Bargains in
Ladies Street Hats
NICK BJORNSTAD, The Shoemari.
In
Order to
do n we
GREATLY
16.50
15.00
_______
Splendid Bargains in Men's Winter Underwear, regular $1.50 to
We are Overstocked
on Children's Coats in
4 to 10 years
which we, toill offer at most
ANY OLD PRICE
Come and Look at
THEY WONT COST *YOU MITCH
and they are
GOOD UP-TO-DATE COATS. 1
1
A i n
must
dispose of our stock there
fore we offer all our K.
& F. & Kuppenh?imer High
grade suits and Overcoats at
REDUCED
PRICES
There i* nothing better
made than thesa mell
known makes
SUITS & OVERCOATS
$22.50 now $16.50
20,00 now 14.50
18.50 now 13 00
now 10,00
All Men's cheaper raits
and
overcoats and all Boy
\s
FAIR.!
eeeeeeee
See them at
Mrs. H. A. Stahl's
MILLINERY PARLORS
SPECIAL SALE
All This Week.
Our fall line of SAMPLE SHOES have just arrived. This is thi BIQQEST
SNAP of the season to get shoes at a low price. You must come early to get the
best selections, this is no FAKE Sale. You all know what these sampla shoes
are, as we have sold them for several years. Yours for Shoe Bargains.
,-v" v .•
/.',v Si#-''*'
mi »MI
I
i-
*l^-*S
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