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I'* a: «v A~ w-* ii* i V, I f? A !*V *& i *c $}•*{?/ -tr- tfAi 4 •V*'' 'i ®tje gaihj £eabcx MADUOK. iODTR UAIOU. TELEPHONE^ NO. 269. Till KSDAV, NOV. 11, 190U. LJ »BK*SOF«tm»Cl»irTIO». trwui.t f«-«j By b»11, A months............. •l/mtll, 8 month* 1 by m*il, 1 month Jr c«irl«r p«r w»ek I" J. bTAHL Proprietor. STATE NEWS Pierre -The Chicago »"fc Northwes tern railway today filed with the secre tary of state, a resolution of extension of the Dallas line thirty eight miles in a westerly direction,clear across Tripp county, making their new termini,s on section 2H, township 99, range 70. This is practically at the point where the line between the new counties! of Mellette and Tgdd touch the Tripp ooanty lln«. Canton -Dr. W O Dunham erf Sionx FhIIb who WAN arrested on a ntatntory charge here several we* ks ago had his case disininsed Monday for lack of evi dence to convict. The dismissal of the owe amounts to ac(|iiittal. It is stat ed that a Sioux Fall* doctor is behind the prowl ntion of Dr. Dunham because c»f professional jealousy ami private grudge held against bim. Elk Point- A union evangelistic maeting will commence in thb city on Moveinlnr ','t is to be out'-icfwd by Evangelit?«*L^wry and Moody. A guarantee fond of wan subscribed an,i a temporary building will be erected on the Dupont lots on Main It v?Jiich the uieelitij^ will lie Wld. Th* meettn* will lie Wd fef ^93® WWiJta, -T #^«aff^d- The Stephen Block, thai* o!*!«/• *ir\ipei, y in Berecficd, and lo tto-te*' oq nu." jat the priucipal rorueis, wae */l by liie at 4 o'clock thin morning. *''The "loan i* $12,000 insur ance $ 000. The losers are D. Ste ben. C. Uinglee & 8ou, F. B. Mar quardt.Lou Wattorn and L. P. Hanson. Armonr— A young »wsu named Ira Otton living south uf "his city com mitted Miiicide Saturday -s.t tfee home of MM. E. G. Uudfrey. D**itsed was subject to rh^usilHui, wrijleh bed left him with a Mifi week. Despondency in the matter ot ?t%niuing bis health is given as I'M' c«»»? of his violent act.. He was is** .jft-aw qt age. Bo&on, Mac:. -—A involving neiHy 4»etween Mrs Mary Bak CI. EtWEv'fonnder and leader of the ('hri& Sati*:-"Vnce .d»'iioiii ination, and her son.George W. Glover of Sonth Dakota, and an adopted son, iSbenezer J. Foster Eddy of Vermont, baa been concluded. Under the set tlement Glover and family receive 1245,000 and Eddy jt-lo.OOO. They agree to relinquish all rights and not contest any will Mrs. Eddy may leave. Pierre—The game warden fund is growing rapidly now thai the counties are sanding in the fun is collects for hunting licenses,and will soon be am ple to provide for an eecfttive working force. The fund has np to the resent accumulated nearly five thousand dol lars. over a thousand of which cfesaae in today through remittances frito ibe counties of Lake, Beadle, Faiuremds and Grant. Warden Bancroft wi'il i*1 able to handle the affairs of his office in better shape next year, and the state system be made to work more efficiently. Bereeford—F. H. Cooke, a prominent resident of Beresford, nearly lost his life and had his features badlv dis figured as the result ot a combination of smoking pipe and comfortable gowu made of outing flannel. He wn« en joying a comfortable smoke at home, dressed in the flannel gown, when a spark fell upon the gown. In a mo ment he was enveloped in flan»ea, which spread with remarkable rapidity. The flames at once jumped to Cooke'u luxuriant growth of whiskers, and it was only through the presence of Mrs. Cooke, who rushed to bis assistance, that his life was saved, and that the bnnse and its contents were not con sumed by the tire. Cooke's face and portions of his body were badly burned. GOV. VESSEY Will Succeed Himself—An Ideal $ Official Says Chair* V* v man Cook. Minneapolis Journal: "Governor Vsssey is not at all worried over his political prospects," said \V. C. Cook, of Sioux Falls, S. D., who was in Min neapolis last night. He has given the state a conservative and sane admin istration and has steadily grown in pnblin contidence. Many stalwarts wno fought him in bis first campaign will vote for him in his second can vass. Mr. Cook is chairman of the repub lican state central committee and a leader of the insurgent faction of his Psrty. "Governor Vessey will be renomi nated ^and re-elected. Animosities so long cherished ny the factions in South Dakota are disappearing to some ex tent," continued Mr. Cook, "and the bitter opposition encountered ^by Gov ernor Vessey a year ago has in large measure vanished. The peonle have found him to be an ideal public ser •ant and have fall faith in his honesty and sincerity. The better elements everywhere will rally to his support. "South Dakota was never so pros parous. Predictions made in early days, and then often regarjed as wild and visionary, have come true. The increase in land values has enriched •11 holders. History will repeat itself la the newly opened sections, where those who failed to get in on the ground floor before now have a splen didjopportwiitj to do ao. The settle- v" v 4'.<p></p>•I*' i Sj. *'•*«.« '1 I ui tmn'&y settlement IP IN THE AIR" is it is. infiit west of the river, in the north ern lilack Hills, reminds one of the boom days of the eighties. It will lake a sweeping calamity even Whalt the development ami prosperity $f the country." COURT DECISION! Against Receiver's Classification at Claims Against Rail road Rapid City, Nov. 10.- Receiver C. (). Bailey's accounting as trustee of the affiairs of the defunct Missouri & Northwestern railroad, was attacked all along the lines in the circuit court before Judge McGee. In the end the judge so modified his previous order that all creditors who furnished goods or id work for the road under contracts with the receiver will come in on equal footing iu the division of the proceeds of the sale. Judge Lewis acted as spokesman for all cf the creditors representing indi vidually H. W. Jones and others, and in modifying his former order Judge McGee now rules that all of the ciedi tors without re8p«ft to the designated cluss in which Receiver Bailey places them, may have an additional fifteen days in which to attack the receiver's account and file objections to the re ceivers classification. He also fixed January 10, 1910, as the date on which the objections would be heard and an nounced tnat Judge Rice would hear the arguments and rule on the plead inu, be being disqualified, owing to the fact that certain creditors bear a colse relationship to bim either by kinship or business wise. In making op his acooaat fieceiver r, THE BIG STORE A W' W/.1^^f Si®ui&Yl /is' n 1/.V. Bailey made Classes A and practi cally pieferred creditors of the estate and included in his preference bis own fees of $6,000, Mr. Cionch's fees of $r,000. Brown & Wood, counsel fees #.rit000, and Goodloe firm of account ants, $ t,000, together with additional attorney's fees for the. Cleveland Trust Co.. amounting to $-1,000. When the account waw originally presented in couit with its gelf-imposed classifica tion,Judge McGee modified iu some de g»ee the orders foimulated by Receiver V'liT-/ Baley, but even with this modification practically everybody was eliminated from sharing in the division of the assets, who bad actually assisted the receiver in conducting the railroad. AFFINinFOOLS. Chicago Clergyman Describes the Germs of Matrimon ial Disease. Chicago, Nov. 10.—"Affinity fools" were discussed by Rev. Frederick 'E. Iloukinc last night in Pilgrim Congre Kational church. Hrst he referred to the woman who becomes weary of the nusband who is working bard and do ing bis best to provide for her comfort. "She tiies to make herself think sne understands a lot of gab from the platform of her club about the larger, the fuller life, and her sphere. Along happens a knave. Together they be gin to think and talk of how they un derstand each other. They look a long tine at each other in silence, ani breathe deep, like an old sitting hen. What wonderful things they discover together, and bow difterent the world looks through each other'B eyes. Thus they proceed through weeks ^and V-V y ~$ml %\n a ,?/ I s a 7 4 i i i A i i i' mitli 1 0rv,vv r,. ti-1. \. Hart Schaffner viarx make clothes that you can know about. Every fabric is all-wool, and you know what that means. You don't know of any other clothing that such a statement is trne about even the clothes your custom tailor makes they may or may not be ali-wool. Every garment is perfectly tailored and the style and fashion are the product of the greatest style creators in the country. You get a positive guarantee from us and from the makers that the clothes shall satisfy you in every way. The point we're making is this—When you buy Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes, you know exactly what you're getting, and it's the best in the world. We'd like to have you see some of the new grays we're showing in the suits. The fabrics are very beautiful, rich in pattern. Such goods are economical always. The new models ht overcoats are also very stylish in many choice fabrics. months of slush, until one day theie is a splash, and both lav tumbled imo the same old hog pen,"where thousands have tumbled before them." Then he told of the husband who tires of the wife "who can make bis cuits that melt in your mouth," whose children are clean-minded, who lovea ber husband, and "can make hats and dresses and shoes, and everything elst) last wonderfully to help him in hie business. "He gets rich, hot she made the wealth as much as anybody. But now listen to him as be begins to talk about his wife's looks, and for a woman made by milliners, dressmakers,dancing aca demies, hairdresseis, and the devil, he wants to exchange his wife, his helper, the architect of his fortune, whose bantb were taught their skill by a heaven sent love. •'He wants to exchange for what he calls an affinity, a glorious woman made in the image of God. If you ba ve gone down into tho refrigerator rooms of a big packing plant, and looked at the row of pig's faces hang ing on their hooks,you have seen a per fect picture of affinity fools unmasked." Both Boys Saved. tiouis Boon, a leading merchant of Nor way. Mich., writes: "Three bottles of Foley's Honey and Tar absolutely cured my boy of a severe cough, aud a n^igh bor'H boy who was so ill with a cold that the doctors gave bim up, was cured by taking Fole/s Honey and Tar.' Noth ing else is as sa e acd certain in results. 3I? Bold b., all druggists. T&ke care of your stomach. Let Kodal digest all the food you eat, for that is what Kodol does. Every tablespoonful of Kodot digests 24 pourds of food. Try it today. It is guarnteed to re lieve you or your money back.^tiold bv Ml Druggists. cagisaag jai«aaaass& This Store is the Home of Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes I I I i k 4* 2 1 -.U J-Z® vi[ rj J- iv V4 mi-* St N a pretty risky place to be but there are daring spirits who brave the dangers and who are rapidly proving that man U will sometime conquer that new realm of science. There are only a few men up in the air in this way but a whole lot of good fel lows are "up in the air" on the clothes question. They don't know what they buy pay a good price, and don't know whether they get good value for it or not There's really no reason for it there's a very simple and easy way of being sure about clothes and we'll tell you what ACC1ESMIAL. Girl Makes Accusation Against Mission School Super intendent, Aberdeen, Nov. 10.—Miss Janet Ek lund, of Minneapolis, aud a Miss Wan ner are in Aberdeen awaiting the ar rival of Bishop Frederick Foote John sou, of the Episcopal dincuse of South Dakota, in order to prefer charges against Superintendent J. L. Kicker, ot the Episcopal mission school at Wakpala, S. D., on the Standing Rock reservation. Miss Eklnnd claims that from the time of her arrival at- the school to take a position as instructor Ricker was overbearing in bis behavior, and that his wife and daughter acted aa though they were jealous of her, al though she did not know of any reason for their actions. She wai employed as matron of the girls of the school, and testiiies that she perfonn-'d her duties conscientiously and efficiently. She also states that there is stili due ber the sum of $l4.r0, which Rickar has not paid her. Allegations re fleet ing upon Bicker's treatment of tbe 'other employes and of the pupils of tne school are also made in tho affidavit in which Miss Eklnnd recites hei woes during ber two weeks' stay at school. Foley's Honey and Tar clears the air passages, stops tho irration in the throat soothe* the inflamed membranes, and tho most obstinate cough disappears. Sore and intlameii lungs are htaled and strengthened, and t^e co:d is expelled from the system. Refuse any but the genuine in the yeUow package—aold by all druggists. -3 W v' S k lirf v i i 1 I fiS' I 1 f' -l-l Pi Copyright Hart, Bchaffnor ft KMX Jk, •fitf/Jr* n w & '1 JL son, Prop. iy Your PLES Sit MUNRCS All Kinds from $3.75 per BbL Up See what We Have Before You Buy H. J. MUNRO E O E '."W .... .- i j. z Jk-ssjfcft.'.**. laB/ri